Implicit Learning and Tacit Knowledge : An Essay on the Cognitive Unconscious
Implicit Learning and Tacit Knowledge : An Essay on the Cognitive Unconscious
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Author(s): Reber, Arthur S.
ISBN No.: 9780195106589
Pages: 200
Year: 199609
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 104.88
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available (On Demand)

"Insightful. [Reber's] work, which ranges from historical background, through data review, to far-reaching extensions and speculations, will be of greatest interest to graduate students and researchers of cognitive psychology, but the crisp, clear writing will be accessible to advanced undergraduates." --Choice"In arguing forcefully for the concept of implicit learning, and in backing his arguments with provocative, well-designed research, Reber has made important contributions to the study of the cognitive unconscious. he has forged new connections between human and animal cognition. This is a valuable book, that should be read by everyone with an interest in the nature of unconscious mental life." --John F. Kihlstrom (Univ of Arizona), Science"Arthur S. Reber is perhaps the most prolific scientific contributor today to the large and burgeoning literature on implicit learning, starting with studies of miniature grammar.


" --American Scientist"In aspiring to resituate the question of learning as a problem of acquisition rather than representation, [Reber] clearly strikes at the central premise of cognitive approaches to learning and teaching and allows us to bring those premises up for inspection. This has got to be both a crucial and fascinating concern for many adult educators who have been so enamored for the past several decades with such issues as learning how to learn, metacognition, andlifelong learning.Those of us interested in the construction of knowledge and the power of research traditions can glean a lot from this insider's view of thirty years of empirical work.The questions the work deals with should be important to us as adult educators if we are truly concerned about howadults learn and how to structure our attempts at instruction." --Adult Education Quarterly"Insightful. [Reber's] work, which ranges from historical background, through data review, to far-reaching extensions and speculations, will be of greatest interest to graduate students and researchers of cognitive psychology, but the crisp, clear writing will be accessible to advanced undergraduates." --Choice"In arguing forcefully for the concept of implicit learning, and in backing his arguments with provocative, well-designed research, Reber has made important contributions to the study of the cognitive unconscious. he has forged new connections between human and animal cognition.


This is a valuable book, that should be read by everyone with an interest in the nature of unconscious mental life." --John F. Kihlstrom (University of Arizona), Science"Arthur S. Reber is perhaps the most prolific scientific contributor today to the large and burgeoning literature on implicit learning, starting with studies of miniature grammar." --American Scientist"In aspiring to resituate the question of learning as a problem of acquisition rather than representation, [Reber] clearly strikes at the central premise of cognitive approaches to learning and teaching and allows us to bring those premises up for inspection. This has got to be both a crucial and fascinating concern for many adult educators who have been so enamored for the past several decades with such issues as learning how to learn, metacognition, andlifelong learning.Those of us interested in the construction of knowledge and the power of research traditions can glean a lot from this insider's view of thirty years of empirical work.The questions the work deals with should be important to us as adult educators if we are truly concerned about howadults learn and how to structure our attempts at instruction.


" --Adult Education Quarterly.


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