2005
DOI: 10.1007/s00426-004-0209-2
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The generation of conscious awareness in an incidental learning situation

Abstract: The purpose of the present experiments was to investigate the generation of conscious awareness (i.e., of verbal report) in an incidental learning situation. While the single-system account assumes that all markers of learning, verbal or nonverbal, index the same underlying knowledge representation, multiple-systems accounts grant verbal report a special status as a marker of learning because they assume that the nonverbal and verbal effects of learning rely on different memory representations. We tested these… Show more

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Cited by 48 publications
(34 citation statements)
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“…In accordance with e.g. Willingham (1998);Haider & Frensch (2005);Hommel (2003); Logan (2002), we assume that all kinds of task processing (i.e., automatic and controlled task processing) obligatorily require a strategic process (the action plan) to establish the task goal and to activate the appropriate stimulus-response rules. In advance of task processing, this strategic process additionally establishes criteria which specify the range of expected response outcomes (or eVects).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In accordance with e.g. Willingham (1998);Haider & Frensch (2005);Hommel (2003); Logan (2002), we assume that all kinds of task processing (i.e., automatic and controlled task processing) obligatorily require a strategic process (the action plan) to establish the task goal and to activate the appropriate stimulus-response rules. In advance of task processing, this strategic process additionally establishes criteria which specify the range of expected response outcomes (or eVects).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Results of studies on implicit learning or skill acquisition focusing on such metacognitive judgments suggest that participants are highly sensitive towards diVerences in their Xuency of processing during learning (e.g., Buchner, SteVens, Erdfelder, & Rothkegel, 1997;Haider & Frensch, 2005). It is worth mentioning that these "Xuency-judgments" by no means imply that participants have any insight into what causes the faster or slower processing speeds (and, by deWnition, they should have no insight into any underlying implicit learning process).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 95%
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“…Pokud jedinci hledají příčinu odchylky od toho, co zakoušejí, s tím, co očekávali, pak ve výše zmíněném kontextu dochází k produkci správné znalosti o příčinách těchto odchylek. Tato hypotéza je podpořena několika empirickými výzkumy (Runger & Frensch, 2008;Haider & Frensch, 2005 Damasio, 2010, s. 93-121). Původně bylo prediktivní kódování navrženo jako model vizuální percepce (Barlow, 1961).…”
Section: Předběžné Vymezení: Od Epizodické Situace K Neočekávané Situaciunclassified
“…For example, learners may show sequence-related performance gains, but at the same time claim to have no verbalizable knowledge about the nature of the learned sequence (or even claim to not have noticed the sequential structure). Explicit knowledge may be based on explicit sequence descriptions in the task instructions, but it is usually developed by testing hypotheses about the nature of the regularity of events (e.g., Haider & Frensch, 2005;Rünger & Frensch, 2010).…”
Section: Explicit Sequence Knowledgementioning
confidence: 99%