Implicit Memory and Metacognition

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Adaptive Strategy Choices
AMN
Anderson's Act
Anderson’s Act
awareness in decision making
Backup Strategies
Category=JMR
cognitive neuroscience
ent
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
executive function
experim
explicit
Explicit Memory
Explicit Memory Retrieval
Explicit Memory Test
explicit versus implicit processes
fluency
frontal
Frontal Lobe
Frontal Lobe Lesions
Frontal Patients
Implicit Memory
Implicit Memory Test
JOL Accuracy
Korsakoffs Syndrome
learning processes in psychology
memories
memory retrieval strategies
Metacognitive Index
patients
PDP Research Group
recognition
retrieval
Retrieval Fluency
Retrieve Information
Sac Model
Search Set Size
semantic
Strategy Choice
Study Episode
Study Test Interval
unconscious cognitive control mechanisms
Word Red
Word Stem Completion Test

Product details

  • ISBN 9780805818604
  • Weight: 700g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Nov 1996
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Metacognition is a term that spans many sub-areas in psychology and means different things to different people. A dominant view has been that metacognition involves the monitoring of performance in order to control cognition; however, it seems reasonable that much of this control runs implicitly (i.e., without awareness). Newer still is the field of implicit memory, and it has different connotations to different sub-groups as well. The editor of this volume takes it to mean that a prior experience affects behavior without the individual's appreciation (ability to report) of this influence.

Implicit memory and metacognition seem to be at two opposite ends of the spectrum -- one seemingly conscious and control-oriented, the other occurring without subjects' awareness. Do these processes relate to each other in interesting ways, or do they operate independently without reference to each other? The relatively novel conjecture that much of the control of cognition operates at an implicit level sparked Reder's desire to explore the interrelationship between the two fields.

Developed within the last two decades, both fields are very new and generate a great deal of excitement and research interest. Hundreds of articles have been written about metacognition and about implicit memory, but little if any material has been published about the two areas in combination. In other words, Metacognition and Implicit Memory is the first book attempting to integrate what should be closely linked efforts in the study of cognitive science.