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Do we reflect while performing skillful actions? Automaticity, control, and the perils of distraction

  • Juan Pablo Bermúdez

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

48 Scopus citations

Abstract

From our everyday commuting to the gold medalist’s world-class performance, skillful actions are characterized by fine-grained, online agentive control. What is the proper explanation of such control? There are two traditional candidates: intellectualism explains skillful agentive control by reference to the agent’s propositional mental states; anti-intellectualism holds that propositional mental states or reflective processes are unnecessary since skillful action is fully accounted for by automatic coping processes. I examine the evidence for three psychological phenomena recently held to support anti-intellectualism (choking under pressure, expertise-induced amnesia, and expert confabulation) and argue that it supports neither traditional candidate, but an intermediate attention-control account, according to which the top-down, intention-directed control of attention is a necessary component of skillful action. Only this account recognizes both the role of automatic control in skilled action and the need for higher-order cognition to thread automatic processes together into a unified, skillful performance. This applies to bodily skillful action in general, from the world-class performance of experts to mundane, habitual action. The attention-control account stresses that, for intentions to play their role as top-down modulators of attention, agents must sustain the intention’s activation; hence, the need for reflecting throughout performance.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)896-924
Number of pages29
JournalPhilosophical Psychology
Volume30
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - 03 Oct 2017
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Attention
  • automaticity
  • control
  • dual process
  • expertise
  • habit
  • skill
  • utilization behavior

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