Influence of Mind Wandering and Increased Attentional Demands on Multitasking and Implicit Learning
Cameron G. Wittschen, Christopher A. Was

TL;DR
This study shows that implicit learning can happen even when someone is focused on an explicit task, like watching a video.
Contribution
The study replicates and extends previous findings by showing implicit learning is unaffected by attentional demands.
Findings
Implicit learning occurred regardless of performance on the video-related multiple-choice questions.
Participants showed improved performance on the serial reaction time task, indicating implicit sequence learning.
Even those who engaged well with the video still demonstrated implicit learning improvements.
Abstract
The goal of the current study was to replicate resent findings that suggest mind wandering is associated with impaired explicit learning but not implicit learning, and to extend those finding by investigating whether explicit learning is impaired under attentional load, but implicit learning is not. We used a sequential learning task, specifically a serial reaction task (SRT), to determine if mind wandering would interfere with learning a task that does not require attentional resources (implicit learning). Participants completed the serial reaction time task while watching a 13-minute video lecture. At the end of the video participants answered 10 multiple-choice questions regarding the content presented in the video. At specific intervals during the task, participants responded to mind wandering probes. The probes required participants to report where their attention was in the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMind wandering and attention · Sleep and Wakefulness Research · Flow Experience in Various Fields
