In their analysis of complex motor skill learning, Shea, Wulf, Whitacre, and Park (2001) have overlooked one of the most robust conclusions of the experimental studies on implicit learning conducted during the last decade—namely that participants usually learn things that are different from those that the experimenter expected them to learn.Weshow that the available literature on implicit learning strongly suggests that the improved performance in Shea et al.’s Experiments 1 and 2 (and similar earlier experiments, e.g., Wulf & Schmidt, 1997) was due to the exploitation of regularities in the target pattern different from those on which the postexperimental interview focused. This rules out the conclusions drawn from the failure of this interview to reveal any explicit knowledge about the task structure on the part of the participants. Similarly, because the information about the task structure provided to an instructed group of participants in Shea et al.’s Experiment 2 did not concern the regularities presumably exploited by the standard, socalled implicit, group, Shea et al.’s claim that explicit knowledge may be less effective than implicit knowledge is misleading.
Publication
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Année de publication : 2003
Type :
Article de journal
Article de journal
Auteurs :
Perruchet, P.
Chambaron, S.
Ferrel-Chapus, C.
Perruchet, P.
Chambaron, S.
Ferrel-Chapus, C.
Titre du journal :
Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology
Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology
Numéro du journal :
5
5
Volume du journal :
56A
56A