Paper & Manuscript Resource Academic_Area Help_Center Life Opening
Before_Submit After_Submit Ebook Seminar News Book_Comment Experiment Computation Photo_show Industry
ASAP_Paper Full-Story_Paper Notes Literature Conference Lit_discussion Non-electronic_lit Electronic_lit Oversea PhD
Paper_List Paper_Writing Thesis Software Glossary Faculty Non-electronic_book Electronic_book MMs'World Postdoc
发新话题
打印

[国外] Subliminal Learning Demonstrated In Human Brain

Subliminal Learning Demonstrated In Human Brain

Although the idea that instrumental learning can occur subconsciously has been around for nearly a century, it had not been unequivocally demonstrated. Now, a new study published by Cell Press in the August 28 issue of the journal Neuron used sophisticated perceptual masking, computational modeling, and neuroimaging to show that instrumental learning can occur in the human brain without conscious processing of contextual cues.

"Humans frequently invoke an argument that their intuition can result in a better decision than conscious reasoning," says lead author Dr. Mathias Pessiglione from the Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging at the University College London. "Such assertions may rely on subconscious associative learning between subliminal signals present in a given situation and choice outcomes." For instance, a seasoned poker player may play more successfully because of a learned association between monetary outcomes and subliminal behavioral manifestations of their opponents.
To investigate this phenomenon, Dr. Pessiglione and colleagues created visual cues from scrambled, novel, abstract symbols. Visual awareness was assessed by displaying two of the masked cues and asking subjects if they perceived any difference. "We reasoned that if subjects were unable to correctly perceive any difference between the masked cues, then they were also unable to build conscious representations of cue-outcome associations," explains Dr. Pessiglione.
In the next set of experiments, subjects performed a subliminal conditioning task that employed the same masking procedure, but the cues were now paired with monetary outcomes. Using this methodology, the researchers observed that pairing rewards and punishments guided behavioral responses and even conditioned preferences for abstract cues that subjects could not consciously see.
The researchers collected scans of the brain, using functional magnetic resonance imaging, to investigate the specific brain circuitry that is linked to subliminal instrumental conditioning. "The ventral striatum responded to subliminal cues and to visible outcomes in a manner that closely approximates our computational algorithm, expressing reward expected values and prediction errors," says Dr. Pessiglione. "We conclude that, even without conscious processing of contextual cues, our brain can learn their reward value and use them to provide a bias on decision making."
The researchers include Mathias Pessiglione, University College London, London, UK, INSERM U610, Universite´ Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris, France; Predrag Petrovic, University College London, London, UK Jean Daunizeau, University College London, London, UK; Stefano Palminteri, INSERM U610, Universite´ Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris, France; Raymond J. Dolan, University College London, London, UKand Chris D. Frith, University College London, London, UK.


New research uses sophisticated perceptual masking, computational modeling, and neuroimaging to show that instrumental learning can occur in the human brain without conscious processing of contextual cues. (Credit: iStockphoto/Kiyoshi Takahase Segundo)

Journal reference:
Mathias Pessiglione, Predrag Petrovic, Jean Daunizeau, Stefano Palminteri, Raymond J. Dolan, and Chris D. Frith. Subliminal Instrumental Conditioning Demonstrated in the Human Brain. Neuron, 2008; 59: 561-567 [link]

Aug 28, 2008
Cell Press

本帖最近评分记录
  • asymmsyn 在2008-8-31 00:09 评分: 金币 +2 原因: 感谢分享 再接再厉

TOP

嗯,有时第一反应却是很正确!

chem is try
chem8 is home

TOP

More fulltext ebooks ...

Random Ebooks

Ebook Title Publisher Format Introducer Date
Advances in Photochemistry, Volume 6 John Wiley & Sonpdf(editorial) woaikelu 2007年11月29日07:09
A Textbook of Modern Toxicology, 3rd Edition John Wiley & Sonpdf(editorial) xwtsq 2007年10月29日13:52
Fundamentals of Electrochemistry, 2nd Edition(2005) John Wiely & Sonpdf(editorial) choscar 2006年06月20日02:50
Modified Nucleosides - in Biochemistry, Biotechnology and Medicine John Wiley & Sonpdf(editorial) zhaojfyx 2008年09月08日11:27
Binary Rare Earth Oxides Springerpdf(editorial) Reuben 2006年09月11日17:31

赞助商链接

赞助商链接

发新话题