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Implicit memories, also known as non-declarative memories, are long-term memories that function outside of conscious awareness. These memories influence behavior and skills without explicit knowledge. This type of memory is evident in tasks like playing tennis, snowboarding, and texting. Implicit memory has three subsystems: procedural memory, conditioning, and priming. This type of memory is essential in various activities, from everyday tasks to specialized skills.
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E. C. Tolman emphasized the purposiveness of behavior — the idea that much of our behavior is goal-directed. For instance, employees who aim for a promotion work diligently to meet their targets. Tolman argued that when classical conditioning and operant conditioning occur, the organism acquires certain expectations. In classical conditioning, a child might fear a dog because they expect it to bite. In operant conditioning, a person might consistently work overtime because they expect a...
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Structure transfer and consolidation in visual implicit learning.

Dominik Garber1, József Fiser1

  • 1Department of Cognitive Science, Center for Cognitive Computation, Central European University, Vienna, Austria.

Elife
|September 16, 2025
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Transfer learning occurs in unsupervised learning, but implicit knowledge transfer is initially impaired. Sleep-dependent memory consolidation enables implicit learners to transfer knowledge similarly to explicit learners.

Keywords:
consolidationhumanimplicit learningneurosciencestructure transfer

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Neuroscience
  • Learning Sciences

Background:

  • Transfer learning, reapplying learned regularities to new situations, is crucial for cognition.
  • Previous research focused on explicit knowledge transfer in supervised/reinforcement learning.
  • The role of transfer learning in implicit, unsupervised learning and its relation to memory consolidation remains unclear.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate transfer learning during implicit and unsupervised learning.
  • To examine the influence of memory consolidation, particularly sleep, on implicit transfer.
  • To compare transfer patterns of explicit versus implicit abstract knowledge.

Main Methods:

  • Extended a visual statistical learning paradigm to a transfer learning context.
  • Compared transfer of newly acquired explicit and implicit abstract knowledge.
  • Introduced a sleep or non-sleep consolidation period between learning phases.

Main Results:

  • Transfer of abstract knowledge was observed during unsupervised learning.
  • Explicit knowledge facilitated immediate transfer, while implicit knowledge initially caused structural interference.
  • Sleep consolidation enabled implicit learners to exhibit transfer similar to explicit learners, without losing implicit status.

Conclusions:

  • Highlights similarities and differences in explicit and implicit learning for generalizable knowledge.
  • Demonstrates that sleep-dependent memory consolidation is crucial for restructuring internal representations and enabling implicit transfer.
  • Suggests distinct consolidation mechanisms for explicit and implicit knowledge transfer.