Implicit Learning and Consciousness

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AGL Experiment
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amnesic
Amnesic Patients
artificial
Artificial Grammar
Artificial Grammar Learning
Artificial Grammar Learning Paradigm
Artificial Grammar Learning Task
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Category=JMT
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cognitive neuroscience
computational modelling
dual process theory
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Experiment 2a
finite
Finite State Grammars
Fully Explicit
grammar
Grammatical Test Items
grammaticality
Higher Order Thought Theory
Implicit Learning
Implicit Learning Abilities
implicit learning mechanisms in amnesia
Implicit Learning Tasks
Inverse Condition
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judgements
Korsakoff Patients
Learning Items
neuropsychological assessment
patients
procedural memory
SOC
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unconscious processing

Product details

  • ISBN 9781841692012
  • Weight: 530g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Apr 2002
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Can you learn without knowing it? This controversial and much debated question forms the basis of this collection of essays as the authors discuss whether the measurable changes in behaviour that result from learning can ever remain entirely unconscious. Three issues central to the topic of implicit learning are raised. Firstly, the extent to which learning can be unconscious, and therefore implicit, is considered. Secondly, theories are developed regarding the nature of knowledge acquired in implicit learning situations. Finally, the idea that there are two separable independent processing systems in the brain, for implicit and explicit learning, is considered.
Implicit Learning and Consciousness challenges conventional wisdom and presents the most up-to-date studies to define, quantify and test the predictions of the main models of implicit learning. The chapters include a variety of research from computer modelling, experimental psychology and neural imaging to the clinical data resulting from work with amnesics. The result is a topical book that provides an overview of the debate on implicit learning, and the various philosophical, psychological and neurological frameworks in which it can be placed. It will be of interest to undergraduates, postgraduates and the philosophical, psychological and modeling research community.

Robert M. French and Axel Cleeremans are both experts in cognitive science , from the University of Liege and the Universite Libre de Bruxelles, respectively.