The Unconscious Has a Mind of Its Own

New research suggests that we’ve been underestimating what unconsciousness is capable of.

New research suggests that we’ve been underestimating what unconsciousness is capable of.

Consciousness is a very popular topic in psychological science, but new research suggests that we’ve been underestimating what unconsciousness is capable of. A study published in Psychological Science shows that the unconscious mind is more intricate and sophisticated than we think.

Volunteers looked through a stereoscope that allowed each eye to view a separate image. In one eye, they viewed continuously flashing blocks of changing colors that suppressed the perception of other objects. In the other eye, they viewed scenes of people interacting with objects that were either congruent (e.g. a woman putting food in an oven) or incongruent (e.g. a woman putting a chessboard in the oven). They were instructed to press one of two buttons when they detected something in the field of vision that had the interaction scenes. Volunteers pressed the button quicker when the scene was incongruent than when congruent.

Incongruent scenes came into awareness much faster than congruent ones, meaning that objects and backgrounds are integrated through unconscious processing. The unconscious mind recognized something was off about the incongruent scene and brought it to consciousness quicker than congruent scenes to help make sense of it.

ResearchBlogging.org
Mudrik, L., Breska, A., Lamy, D., & Deouell, L.Y. (2011). Integration Without Awareness: Expanding the Limits of Unconscious Processing. Psychological Science. doi: 10.1177/0956797611408736

Comments

This has been known for at least fifty years, possibly longer.
Pilots in aircraft where there were 350+ instruments and switches were trained to only “see” an instrument if it were “not in the green”.
The physical technique was to learn how to scan the instruments in a logical and determined manner, and then train muscle memory in processes to deal with any subsequent indication.
In some aircraft, there were as many as 400+ different instruments and indicators, and if the pilot were flying at 1,200 MPH at 100 feet they could not afford the time to work something out.
The subconscious Mind was trained by rote, to the point where you could literally fly the aircraft with your eyes closed.

How can I volunteer as a research subject?


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