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Examining interpersonal metacognitive monitoring in artificial grammar learning. / Савина, Алина Игоревна; Зверев, Илья Владимирович; Морошкина, Надежда Владимировна.

в: Consciousness and Cognition, Том 122, № 122, 103707, 01.07.2024.

Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданияхстатьяРецензирование

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@article{91f6300e413a42bf9927bbce0c091a03,
title = "Examining interpersonal metacognitive monitoring in artificial grammar learning",
abstract = "This study investigates the observers' ability to monitor the ongoing cognitive processes of a partner who is implicitly learning an artificial grammar. Our hypothesis posits that learners experience metacognitive feelings as they attempt to apply their implicit knowledge, and that observers are capable of detecting and interpreting these feelings as cues of the learner's cognitive state. For instance, learners might encounter affective signals linked to cognitive conflicts and errors at different processing stages, which observers can construe as manifestations of the learner's cognitive dissonance. The research involved 126 participants organized into dyads, with one participant acting as a learner, and the other as an observer. The observer's task was to judge whether the learner agrees with the information presented (consonance judgment) and was limited to reading the learner's nonverbal signals to avoid explicit mindreading. The findings suggest that observers possess mindreading abilities, enabling them to detect both learners' confidence and accuracy in stimuli classification. This extends our understanding of non-verbal mindreading capabilities and indicates that observers can effectively interpret early implicit metacognitive information, even in the absence of explicit self-evaluation from the learners. This research offers significant insights into how individuals interpret others' mental states during implicit learning tasks, particularly in the context of utilizing early affective cues within the Artificial Grammar Learning paradigm.",
keywords = "Implicit learning, Metacognitive experiences, Metacognitive monitoring, Mindreading",
author = "Савина, {Алина Игоревна} and Зверев, {Илья Владимирович} and Морошкина, {Надежда Владимировна}",
year = "2024",
month = jul,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/j.concog.2024.103707",
language = "English",
volume = "122",
journal = "Consciousness and Cognition",
issn = "1053-8100",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "122",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Examining interpersonal metacognitive monitoring in artificial grammar learning

AU - Савина, Алина Игоревна

AU - Зверев, Илья Владимирович

AU - Морошкина, Надежда Владимировна

PY - 2024/7/1

Y1 - 2024/7/1

N2 - This study investigates the observers' ability to monitor the ongoing cognitive processes of a partner who is implicitly learning an artificial grammar. Our hypothesis posits that learners experience metacognitive feelings as they attempt to apply their implicit knowledge, and that observers are capable of detecting and interpreting these feelings as cues of the learner's cognitive state. For instance, learners might encounter affective signals linked to cognitive conflicts and errors at different processing stages, which observers can construe as manifestations of the learner's cognitive dissonance. The research involved 126 participants organized into dyads, with one participant acting as a learner, and the other as an observer. The observer's task was to judge whether the learner agrees with the information presented (consonance judgment) and was limited to reading the learner's nonverbal signals to avoid explicit mindreading. The findings suggest that observers possess mindreading abilities, enabling them to detect both learners' confidence and accuracy in stimuli classification. This extends our understanding of non-verbal mindreading capabilities and indicates that observers can effectively interpret early implicit metacognitive information, even in the absence of explicit self-evaluation from the learners. This research offers significant insights into how individuals interpret others' mental states during implicit learning tasks, particularly in the context of utilizing early affective cues within the Artificial Grammar Learning paradigm.

AB - This study investigates the observers' ability to monitor the ongoing cognitive processes of a partner who is implicitly learning an artificial grammar. Our hypothesis posits that learners experience metacognitive feelings as they attempt to apply their implicit knowledge, and that observers are capable of detecting and interpreting these feelings as cues of the learner's cognitive state. For instance, learners might encounter affective signals linked to cognitive conflicts and errors at different processing stages, which observers can construe as manifestations of the learner's cognitive dissonance. The research involved 126 participants organized into dyads, with one participant acting as a learner, and the other as an observer. The observer's task was to judge whether the learner agrees with the information presented (consonance judgment) and was limited to reading the learner's nonverbal signals to avoid explicit mindreading. The findings suggest that observers possess mindreading abilities, enabling them to detect both learners' confidence and accuracy in stimuli classification. This extends our understanding of non-verbal mindreading capabilities and indicates that observers can effectively interpret early implicit metacognitive information, even in the absence of explicit self-evaluation from the learners. This research offers significant insights into how individuals interpret others' mental states during implicit learning tasks, particularly in the context of utilizing early affective cues within the Artificial Grammar Learning paradigm.

KW - Implicit learning

KW - Metacognitive experiences

KW - Metacognitive monitoring

KW - Mindreading

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/c9efc306-9284-378c-8859-e3e38a72ad80/

U2 - 10.1016/j.concog.2024.103707

DO - 10.1016/j.concog.2024.103707

M3 - Article

VL - 122

JO - Consciousness and Cognition

JF - Consciousness and Cognition

SN - 1053-8100

IS - 122

M1 - 103707

ER -

ID: 120070836