Beyond Dissociation

Interaction between dissociated implicit and explicit processing

Editors
 | INSERM, Espace et Action, Bron, France
 | University of Turku
PaperbackAvailable
ISBN 9789027251428 (Eur) | EUR 72.00
ISBN 9781556196652 (USA) | USD 108.00
 
e-Book
ISBN 9789027299925 | EUR 72.00 | USD 108.00
 
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Netlibrary e-BookNot for resale
ISBN 9780585461212
Analysis and dissociation have proved to be useful tools to understand the basic functions of the brain and the mind, which therefore have been decomposed to a multitude of ever smaller subsystems and pieces by most scientific approaches. However, the understanding of complex functions such as consciousness will not succeed without a more global consideration of the ways the mind-brain works. This implies that synthesis rather than analysis should be applied to the brain. The present book offers a collection of contributions ranging from sensory and motor cognitive neuroscience to mood management and thought, which all focus on the dissociation between conscious (explicit) and nonconscious (implicit) processing in different cognitive situations. The contributions in this book clearly demonstrate that conscious and nonconscious processes typically interact in complex ways. The central message of this collection of papers is: In order to understand how the brain operates as one integrated whole that generates cognition and behaviour, we need to reassemble the brain and mind and put all the conscious and nonconscious pieces back together again. (Series B)
[Advances in Consciousness Research, 22] 2000.  x, 372 pp.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 1 January 2003
Table of Contents
“The book's strongest point is the sheer range of dissociations covered.”
Cited by (11)

Cited by 11 other publications

MacNeil, Raymond R. & James T. Enns
2024. The “What” and “How” of Pantomime Actions. Vision 8:4  pp. 58 ff. DOI logo
Won, Bo-Yeong & Andrew B. Leber
2024. Intermixed levels of visual search difficulty produce asymmetric probability learning. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics 86:5  pp. 1545 ff. DOI logo
Morsi, Rami Z & Jeffrey A Katz
2021. “Zombielike” Aggression in Perampanel Overdose. Cureus DOI logo
Brogaard, Berit
2011. Are there unconscious perceptual processes?. Consciousness and Cognition 20:2  pp. 449 ff. DOI logo
Balconi, Michela
2010. Disruption of the Sense of Agency: From Perception to Self-knowldge. In Neuropsychology of the Sense of Agency,  pp. 125 ff. DOI logo
Brozzoli, Claudio, Alessandro Farnè & Yves Rossetti
2007. Divide et impera? Towards integrated multisensory perception and action. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 30:2  pp. 202 ff. DOI logo
Knoblich, Günther & Tilo T. J. Kircher
2004. Deceiving Oneself About Being in Control: Conscious Detection of Changes in Visuomotor Coupling.. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance 30:4  pp. 657 ff. DOI logo
Pacherie, Élisabeth
2003. La dynamique des intentions. Dialogue 42:3  pp. 447 ff. DOI logo
Raab, Markus
2003. Decision making in sports: Influence of complexity on implicit and explicit learning. International Journal of Sport and Exercise Psychology 1:4  pp. 406 ff. DOI logo
L. Saitta & Rossetti, Yves
2003. Abstraction from a sensori-motor perspective: can we get a quick hold on simple perception?. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences 358:1435  pp. 1269 ff. DOI logo
Revonsuo, Antti
2000. Consciousness as a Research Problem in Cognitive Neuroscience. Nordisk Psykologi 52:4  pp. 263 ff. DOI logo

This list is based on CrossRef data as of 29 november 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.

Subjects

Consciousness Research

Consciousness research

Philosophy

Philosophy

Main BIC Subject

JM: Psychology

Main BISAC Subject

PSY000000: PSYCHOLOGY / General
ONIX Metadata
ONIX 2.1
ONIX 3.0
U.S. Library of Congress Control Number:  00037961 | Marc record