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ACQUISITION OF INTELLECTUAL AND PERCEPTUAL-MOTOR SKILLS

by: David A. Rosenbaum, Richard A. Carlson, Rick O. Gilmore
Annual Review of Psychology, Vol. 52, No. 1. (2001), pp. 453-470.
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Abstract

▪ Abstract  Recent evidence indicates that intellectual and perceptual-motor skills are acquired in fundamentally similar ways. Transfer specificity, generativity, and the use of abstract rules and reflexlike productions are similar in the two skill domains; brain sites subserving thought processes and perceptual-motor processes are not as distinct as once thought; explicit and implicit knowledge characterize both kinds of skill; learning rates, training effects, and learning stages are remarkably similar for the two skill classes; and imagery, long thought to play a distinctive role in high-level thought, also plays a role in perceptual-motor learning and control. The conclusion that intellectual skills and perceptual-motor skills are psychologically more alike than different accords with the view that all knowledge is performatory.


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