2001
DOI: 10.1177/0959354301115003
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The Control of Everyday Behaviour

Abstract: It has recently been claimed by several authors that all behaviour is causally determined by unconscious mechanisms, and not under our conscious control. What this amounts to is that none of our everyday behaviour can be regarded as intentional, as action. The aim of the present paper is to discuss the evidence on which this claim is based. The conclusion is that though numerous psychological phenomena (like perception, memory, feeling, mood, mannerisms and automatisms) have unconscious determinants, the data … Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…Yet the role of intentions in data collection and laboratory experiments is usually ignored [Vollmer, 2001]. It plays an equally prominent role in cognitive experiments, with special significance for cognitive science.…”
Section: Intentionality and Other Dilemmasmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet the role of intentions in data collection and laboratory experiments is usually ignored [Vollmer, 2001]. It plays an equally prominent role in cognitive experiments, with special significance for cognitive science.…”
Section: Intentionality and Other Dilemmasmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The simple fact that scientists are disposed to evaluate participants' intentions contradicts (or at least qualifies) any claim that performances are automatic. The contrast with uncooperative performances makes more salient the spheres of intentionality that surround every cooperative performance (Vollmer, 2001). Otherwise, the attribution of uncooperative performance is paradoxical.…”
Section: Intuitive Intentionalitymentioning
confidence: 98%
“…It is still the case that no generally accepted definition exists that can distinguish automatic laboratory performances from intentional performances. Now, as in the past, definitions of the term automatic behavior lean precariously and exclusively on intuition and a few illustrative laboratory performances (Vollmer, 2001).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…First, human behaviour is determined by the conscious mechanism [23]. Second, it is possible to distinguish two stages: one preliminary with an automatic activation by external stimulus and another where the effect on the previous system can be observed [24]. In this sense, conscious and unconscious behaviours are related, respectively, to explicit and implicit needs [21] that will have to be taken into account by product and industrial designers in order to achieve good designs ( Figure 2).…”
Section: Behavioural Levelmentioning
confidence: 99%