回複:回複:回複:不敢苟同:)

來源: 潔心 2009-05-26 21:09:17 [] [博客] [舊帖] [給我悄悄話] 本文已被閱讀: 次 (5209 bytes)
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回答: 回複:不敢苟同:)潔心2009-05-26 17:57:58
霸王真好學, :)))

現代的潛意識定義比起弗的定義範圍確實寬闊了很多。我想原因之一是因為各個不同的學科都用自己獨特的角度來研究它,定義它。

網上摘來一段是認知心理學(cognitive psychology)對潛意識的研究。不同於精神分析學的是,認知心理學對潛意識的定義要廣得多。其中也提到procedure knowledge.

晚安。

In modern cognitive psychology, many researchers have sought to strip the notion of the unconscious from its Freudian heritage, and alternative terms such as 'implicit' or 'automatic' have come into currency. These traditions emphasize the degree to which cognitive processing happens outside the scope of cognitive awareness, and show that things we are unaware of can nonetheless influence other cognitive processes as well as behavior. Active research traditions related to the unconscious include implicit memory, and nonconscious acquisition of knowledge.

While, historically, the psychoanalytic research tradition was the first to focus on the phenomenon of unconscious mental activity (and still the term "unconsciousness" or "the subconscious", for many, appears to be not only deeply rooted in, but almost synonymous with psychoanalytic tradition), there is an extensive body of conclusive research and knowledge in the contemporary cognitive psychology devoted to the mental activity that is not mediated by conscious awareness.

Most of that (cognitive) research on unconscious processes has been done in the mainstream, academic tradition of the information processing paradigm. As opposed to the psychoanalytic tradition, driven by the relatively speculative (in the sense of being hard to empirically verify), theoretical concepts such as Oedipus complex or Electra complex, the cognitive tradition of research on unconscious processes is based on relatively few theoretical assumptions and is very empirically oriented (i.e., it is mostly data driven). Cognitive research has revealed that automatically, and clearly outside of conscious awareness, individuals register and acquire more information than what they can experience through their conscious thoughts.

For example, an extensive line of research conducted by Hasher and Zacks [42] has demonstrated that automatically (i.e., outside of conscious awareness and without engaging conscious information processing resources), individuals register information about the frequency of events. Moreover, that research demonstrates that perceivers do that unintentionally, truly "automatically," regardless of the instructions they receive, and regardless of the information processing goals they have. Interestingly, their ability to unconsciously, and relatively accurately tally the frequency of events appears to have little or no relation to the individual's age, education, intelligence, or personality, thus it may represent one of the fundamental building blocks of human orientation in the environment and possibly the acquisition of procedural knowledge and experience, in general.

Another line of (non-psychoanalytic) early research on unconscious processes was initiated by Arthur Reber, using so-called "artificial grammar" methodology. That research revealed that individuals exposed to novel words created by complex set of artificial, synthetic "grammatical" rules (e.g., GKHAH, KHABT…), quickly develop some sort of a "feel" for that grammar and subsequent working knowledge of that grammar, as demonstrated by their ability to differentiate between, new grammatically "correct" (i.e., consistent with the rules) and "incorrect" (inconsistent) words. Interestingly, that ability does not appear to be mediated, or even accompanied by the declarative knowledge of the rules (i.e., individuals' ability to articulate how they distinguish between the correct and incorrect words).

The gist of these early findings (from the seventies) has been significantly extended in the eighties and nineties by further research showing that outside of conscious awareness individuals not only acquire information about frequencies (i.e., "occurrences" of features or events) but also co-occurrences (i.e., correlations or, technically speaking, covariations) between features or events. Extensive research on nonconscious acquisition of information about covariations was conducted by Pawel Lewicki, followed by research of D. L. Schachter (who is known for introducing the concept of implicit memory), L. R. Squire, and others.

Nonconscious acquisition of information about covariations appears to be one of the fundamental and ubiquitous processes involved in the acquisition of knowledge (skills, experience) or even preferences or personality dispositions, including disorders or symptoms of disorders.

Unlike in the psychoanalytic research tradition that uses the terms "unconscious," in the cognitive tradition, the processes that are not mediated by conscious awareness are sometimes referred to as "nonconscious." This term, rarely used in psychoanalysis, stresses the empirical and purely descriptive nature of that phenomenon (a qualification as simply "not being conscious") in the tradition of cognitive research.


所有跟帖: 

回複:回複:回複:回複:不敢苟同:) -潔心- 給 潔心 發送悄悄話 潔心 的博客首頁 (803 bytes) () 05/26/2009 postreply 21:45:54

回複:回複:回複:回複:回複:不敢苟同:) -呆霸王- 給 呆霸王 發送悄悄話 呆霸王 的博客首頁 (127 bytes) () 05/26/2009 postreply 22:08:30

開車習慣是不是用下意識更好,亂說一下 -y'ymimmo- 給 y'ymimmo 發送悄悄話 y'ymimmo 的博客首頁 (0 bytes) () 05/27/2009 postreply 08:49:03

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