Channon Shelley, Shanks David, Johnstone Theresa, Vakili Kian, Chin Jasmine, Sinclair Elizabeth
Subdepartment of Clinical Health Psychology, University College London, Gower Street, UK.
Neuropsychologia. 2002;40(12):2185-97. doi: 10.1016/s0028-3932(02)00037-4.
We examined implicit learning of an artificial grammar in amnesic and control participants. The "biconditional" grammar used to generate study and test strings allows two potential sources of judgements in artificial grammar learning to be unconfounded: participants could either learn the abstract biconditional rules or could learn about the distributional statistics of the surface elements (e.g. bigrams) composing the study items. Test strings varied these two sources orthogonally. We found no evidence of abstract rule learning either in the control or amnesic groups. In contrast, both groups learned about the surface elements and tended to call test strings "grammatical" when they were composed of familiar bigrams. However, this sensitivity to bigram familiarity was significantly reduced in the amnesic compared to the control group. The results challenge the claim that implicit learning is intact in amnesia.
我们研究了失忆症患者和对照组参与者对人工语法的内隐学习。用于生成学习和测试字符串的“双条件”语法,使得人工语法学习中两个潜在的判断来源不会混淆:参与者要么学习抽象的双条件规则,要么学习构成学习项目的表面元素(如双字母组)的分布统计信息。测试字符串将这两个来源进行了正交变化。我们在对照组或失忆症组中均未发现抽象规则学习的证据。相比之下,两组都学习了表面元素,并且当测试字符串由熟悉的双字母组组成时,倾向于称其为“符合语法的”。然而,与对照组相比,失忆症组对双字母组熟悉度的这种敏感性显著降低。这些结果对失忆症患者内隐学习完好无损这一说法提出了质疑。