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Multisensory transfer effects in implicit and explicit category learning.

Xunwei Sun1,2,3, Liansheng Yao1,2, Qiufang Fu4,5

  • 1State Key Laboratory of Brain and Cognitive Science, Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, 100101, China.

Psychological Research
|November 4, 2022
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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Transfer in category learning differs between implicit and explicit tasks, especially across different sensory inputs. Explicit learning with feedback facilitates cross-modal transfer, while implicit learning does not.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Neuroscience
  • Machine Learning

Background:

  • Category learning involves applying prior knowledge to new stimuli.
  • Transfer in category learning is crucial but its mechanisms in multisensory implicit versus explicit learning remain debated.
  • The role of explicit knowledge in transfer, particularly under multisensory conditions, is not fully understood.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate how transfer differs in implicit (information integration, II) and explicit (rule-based, RB) category learning using multisensory stimuli.
  • To determine if explicit knowledge is essential for transfer across different sensory feature modalities.
  • To clarify the conditions under which spontaneous and dependent transfer occur in implicit and explicit multisensory category learning.

Main Methods:

  • Employed implicit (II) and explicit (RB) category learning tasks with multisensory stimuli.
  • Manipulated feature modality overlap between training and novel sets.
  • Varied feedback conditions (immediate, delayed, none) to assess learning strategies and transfer.

Main Results:

  • Spontaneous transfer within the same feature modalities was high in II but low in RB; feedback equalized transfer.
  • Transfer across different feature modalities was absent without feedback but present in RB with feedback, not II.
  • Delayed feedback impaired II task performance, suggesting implicit learning, but not RB task performance, indicating explicit rule use.

Conclusions:

  • Transfer to novel stimuli is possible in both implicit and explicit category learning within shared feature modalities.
  • Transfer across different feature modalities requires explicit learning and feedback.
  • Findings contribute to understanding category learning theories, particularly concerning the interplay of implicit/explicit processes and multisensory integration in transfer.