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The distinction between intuition and guessing in the SRT task generation: a reply to Norman and Price
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-07, 18:19 authored by Qiufang Fu, Zoltan DienesZoltan Dienes, Xiaolan FuWe (Fu, Dienes, & Fu, 2010) investigated the extent to which people could generate sequences of responses based on knowledge acquired from the Serial Reaction Time task, depending on whether it felt subjectively like the response was based on pure guessing, intuition, conscious rules or memories. Norman and Price (2010) argued that in the context of our task, intuition responses were the same as guessing responses. In reply, we argue that not only do subjects apparently claim to be experiencing different phenomenologies when saying intuition versus guess, but also intuition and guess responses are associated with different behaviors. We found that people could control the knowledge when generating responses felt to be based on intuition but not those felt to be pure guessing. We present further evidence here that triplets associated with intuition but not guessing were also processed fluently.
History
Publication status
- Published
Journal
Consciousness and CognitionISSN
1053-8100External DOI
Issue
1Volume
19Page range
478-480Department affiliated with
- Psychology Publications
Full text available
- No
Peer reviewed?
- Yes