Search results for "Implicit learning"

showing 10 items of 29 documents

Abstraction of covariations in incidental learning and covariation bias

1997

Experiment 1 was devised to distinguish, in a given set of features composing drawn robots, those whose variations were related a priori for participants from those whose variations were a priori independent. In Expt 2, correlations were experimentally induced between a priori-related features for one group of participants (pre-primed group), and between a priori-independent features for another group {arbitrary group), in incidental learning conditions. A subsequent transfer phase revealed that participants' performances were sensitive to experimentally induced correlations in both groups. However, only the performances of the pre-primed group accurately matched the predictions of a statis…

ConsonantReinterpretationGroup (mathematics)A priori and a posterioriStatistical modelSet (psychology)PsychologyGeneral PsychologyImplicit learningCognitive psychologyAbstraction (linguistics)Developmental psychologyBritish Journal of Psychology
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Implicit learning and implicit memory in moderate to severe memory disorders

2010

Numerous experimental psychology studies have established firmly that important parts of the human cognitive process operate automatically without the conscious or explicit control of the subjects (9). Such processes can concern memorization of episodes from life in a way that will subsequently have an implicit influence on our behavior (such as decision-making or reaction time). They can equally assist acquisition of more complex knowledge from our surroundings, by the automatic capture of the statistical regularities found in them (see Chapter “Introducing implicit learning: from the laboratory to the real life”, E. Bigand and C. Delbe). This is the way, for example, that a baby learns to…

GrammarComputer scienceExperimental psychologymedia_common.quotation_subjectExplicit memoryCognitionImplicit memorySentenceImplicit learningMemorizationCognitive psychologymedia_common
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What can synaesthesia tell us about our minds?

2014

Synaesthesia is considered here as a cognitive phenomenon in the context of developmental, neuropathological and linguistic perspectives. Developmental synaesthesia seems to arise as an effect of interplay between genotype and phenotype, during the implicit learning process in childhood, in those individuals who possess an inborn susceptibility to it. Some connections between synaesthesia and extraordinary experiences, brain restructuration and pain, are examined. Acquired types of synaesthesia may be related to sensory deprivation. The somatosensory cortex may be significant for cognitive synaesthesia, with especial importance placed on a mirror system. It is suggested here that synaesthes…

Linguistics and LanguageCognitive NeuroscienceCommunicationCognitionContext (language use)Language and LinguisticsImplicit learningPerceptual systemSensory deprivationAssociation (psychology)PsychologyPiaget's theory of cognitive developmentMirror neuronCognitive psychologyTheoria et Historia Scientiarum
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Are we "experienced listeners"? A review of the musical capacities that do not depend on formal musical training.

2006

The present paper reviews a set of studies designed to investigate different aspects of the capacity for processing Western music. This includes perceiving the relationships between a theme and its variations, perceiving musical tensions and relaxations, generating musical expectancies, integrating local structures in large-scale structures, learning new compositional systems and responding to music in an emotional (affective) way. The main focus of these studies was to evaluate the influence of intensive musical training on these capacities. The overall set of data highlights that some musical capacities are acquired through exposure to music without the help of explicit training. These ca…

Linguistics and LanguageMusic psychologyCognitive Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectEmotionsExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyCognitionMusicalLanguage and LinguisticsImplicit learningCognitionMusic and emotionDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyAuditory PerceptionHumansLearningPsychoacousticsSet (psychology)PsychologyPitch PerceptionSophisticationMusicmedia_commonCognitive psychologyPsychoacousticsCognition
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Implicit Learning in Children Is Not Related to Age: Evidence from Drawing Behavior

2000

Three experiments are reported on implicit learning in 432 children between the ages of 4 and 10 years, using a new paradigm ("the neutral parameter procedure") based on drawing behavior. The first two experiments demonstrated that children modified their drawing behavior following specially devised practice in such a way that these modifications could not be viewed as the result of deliberate adaptive strategies. The third experiment showed that these behavioral modifications lasted for at least 1 hr after the training phase. No age-related differences appeared in the experiments. A comparison of children's data with similar adults' data also failed to reveal any age differences. These res…

MaleAgingAdaptive strategiesmedia_common.quotation_subjectModels PsychologicalEducationDevelopmental psychologyImplicit knowledgeChild DevelopmentDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyCognitive developmentHumansLearningPersonalityChildmedia_commonAnalysis of VarianceAge differencesRetention PsychologyCognitionImplicit learningPractice PsychologicalChild PreschoolPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthTraining phaseFemalePsychologyPsychomotor PerformanceCognitive psychologyChild Development
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Learning implicitly to produce avoided behaviours

2011

The literature on repetition processing reveals an intriguing paradox between the particular salience of repetitions, which makes them easy to learn, and a tendency to avoid them when generating sequences. The aim of this experiment was to study the extent to which children can learn to produce these avoided behaviours by means of an artificial grammar paradigm using generation tests with implicit or explicit instructions. The analysis of the control group's performance confirmed the presence of a spontaneous tendency to avoid generating repetitions. A comparison with chance revealed that the children learned to produce repetitions in the explicit test but not in the implicit test. However…

MaleArtificial grammar learningPhysiologymedia_common.quotation_subjectChild BehaviorExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyCognitionPhysiology (medical)HumansLearningChildControl (linguistics)General Psychologymedia_commonGrammarSalience (language)Repetition (rhetorical device)LinguisticsGeneral MedicineImplicit learningTest (assessment)Neuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyVideo GamesPractice PsychologicalFemalePsychologySocial psychologyCognitive psychologyQuarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology
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Children's Implicit Learning of Graphotactic and Morphological Regularities

2005

In French, the transcription of the same sound can be guided by both probabilistic graphotactic constraints (e.g., /epsilon t/ is more often transcribed ette after -v than after -f) and morphological constraints (e.g., /epsilon t/ is always transcribed ette when used as a diminutive suffix). Three experiments showed that pseudo-word spellings of 8-to 11-year-old children and adults were influenced by both types of constraints. The influence of graphotactic regularities persisted when reliance on morphological rules was possible, without any falling off as a function of age. This suggests that rules are not abstracted, even after massive amounts of exposure to a rule-based material. These re…

MaleGrammarmedia_common.quotation_subjectLinguisticsStatistical modelLanguage acquisitionVocabularyLinguisticsImplicit learningEducationDiminutiveTranscription (linguistics)PhoneticsTouchPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyHumansLearningFemaleSuffixChildPsychologymedia_commonChild Development
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Implicit learning of a repeated segment in continuous tracking: A reappraisal

2006

Several prior studies (e.g., Shea, Wulf, Whitacre, & Park, 2001; Wulf & Schmidt, 1997) have apparently demonstrated implicit learning of a repeated segment in continuous-tracking tasks. In two conceptual replications of these studies, we failed to reproduce the original findings. However, these findings were reproduced in a third experiment, in which we used the same repeated segment as that used in the Wulf et al. studies. Analyses of the velocity and the acceleration of the target suggests that this repeated segment could be easier to track than the random segments serving as control, accounting for the results of Wulf and collaborators. Overall these experiments suggest that lea…

MaleSerial reaction timeTime Factors[ INFO.INFO-TS ] Computer Science [cs]/Signal and Image ProcessingPhysiologySpeech recognition[SHS.PSY]Humanities and Social Sciences/Psychology050109 social psychologyExperimental and Cognitive Psychology[ SPI.SIGNAL ] Engineering Sciences [physics]/Signal and Image processingTracking (particle physics)050105 experimental psychologyRandom Allocation[ SHS.PSY ] Humanities and Social Sciences/PsychologyAcceleration[INFO.INFO-TS]Computer Science [cs]/Signal and Image ProcessingPhysiology (medical)Reaction TimeHumansLearningTraitement du signal et de l'imagePsychology0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesStudentsGeneral PsychologyAnalysis of VarianceCommunicationbusiness.industry05 social sciencesSignal and Image processingRetention PsychologyRecognition PsychologyGeneral MedicineImplicit learningNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyPsychologieFemalebusinessPsychology[SPI.SIGNAL]Engineering Sciences [physics]/Signal and Image processingPsychomotor PerformanceTraitement du signal et de l'image (Informatique)
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More About the Musical Expertise of Musically Untrained Listeners

2003

Several behavioral experiments that were designed to compare the abilities of musicians and nonmusicians to process subtle changes in musical structures are surveyed. These experiments deal with different aspects of music perception including the processing of melodic and harmonic structures, the processing of large-scale structures, and implicit learning. In all these experiments, the so-called nonmusician listeners behaved in a very similar way as did highly trained students from music conservatories and music departments. This outcome suggests that when the experimental setting requires participants to process musical structures (in contrast to musical tones), the large audience of untra…

MelodyAuditory perceptionCommunicationInformationSystems_INFORMATIONINTERFACESANDPRESENTATION(e.g.HCI)Music psychologybusiness.industryGeneral NeuroscienceBrainMusicalContrast (music)Musical toneGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyImplicit learningHistory and Philosophy of ScienceMusic and emotionAuditory PerceptionHumansOccupationsbusinessPsychologyMusicCognitive psychologyAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences
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Aging effects and feasibility of statistical learning tasks across modalities

2021

Knowledge on statistical learning (SL) in healthy elderly is scarce. Theoretically, it is not clear whether aging affects modality-specific and/or domain-general learning mechanisms. Practically, there is a lack of research on simplified SL tasks, which would ease the burden of testing in clinical populations. Against this background, we conducted two experiments across three modalities (auditory, visual and visuomotor) in a total of 93 younger and older adults. In Experiment 1, SL was induced in all modalities. Aging effects appeared in the tasks relying on an explicit posttest to assess SL. We hypothesize that declines in domain-general processes that predominantly modulate explicit learn…

ModalitiesModality (human–computer interaction)genetic structuresStatistical learningExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyHealthy elderlybehavioral disciplines and activitiesImplicit learningTask (project management)Psychiatry and Mental healthNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyExplicit learningGeriatrics and GerontologyPsychologypsychological phenomena and processesCognitive psychologyAging, Neuropsychology, and Cognition
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