Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-gb8f7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-24T01:09:10.820Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

“Multiple Drafts” of subjective experience viewed within a microgenetic framework for cognition and consciousness

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 February 2010

Joseph Glicksohn
Affiliation:
Department of Criminology, Bar-ilan University, Ramat Gan, 52100, Israel. [email protected]

Abstract

The notion of “multiple drafts” is one that has attracted the attention of researchers working within the “microgenetic” framework to perception and cognition, deriving from the work of Heinz Werner (1948). Dennett and Kinsboume's (1992) position can be further explored with reference to this earlier literature. The present commentary attempts to ground the D&K model within this larger theoretical debate.

Type
Continuing Commentary
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1995

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Breitmeyer, B. C. (1984) Visual masking. Clarendon Press. [DS]Google Scholar
Brown, G. P. (1977) A model for the levels of concentrative meditation. International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis 25:236–73. [JG]Google Scholar
Cheesman, J. & Merikle, P. M. (1985) Word recognition and consciousness. In: Reading research: Advance in theory and practice. Vol. 5, Besner, D., Waller, T. G. & MacKinnon, G. E., eds. [DS]Google Scholar
Deikman, A. (1977) Bimodal consciousness and the mystic experience. In: Symposium on consciousness, Lee, P. R. et al. eds. Penguin. [JG]Google Scholar
Dennett, D. C. (1991) Consciousness explained. Little, Brown. [rDCD, DS]Google Scholar
Dennett, D. C. & Kinsbourne, M. (1992) Time and the observer: The where and when of consciousness in the brain. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 15:183247. [JG, DS]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Flavell, J. H. & Draguns, J. (1957) A microgenetic approach to preception and thought. Psychological Bulletin 54:197217. [JG]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Glicksohn, J. (1987) Hypnotic behaviour revisted: A trait-context interaction. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:774–75. [JG]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goodblatt, C. & Glicksohn, J. (19891990) The poetics of meditation: Whitman's meditative catalog. Imagination, Cognition and Personality 9:7586. [JG]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grey Walter, W. (1963) Presentation to the Ostler Society, Oxford University, Oxford, England. [DS]Google Scholar
Hamad, S. (1987) Category induction and representation. In: Categorical percefMon: The groundwork of cognition, Hamad, S., ed. Cambridge University Press. [DS]Google Scholar
Hofstader, D. R. (1979) Gödel, Escher, Bach: An eternal golden braid. Basic Books. [rDCD]Google Scholar
Holender, D. (1986) Semantic activation without conscious identification in dichotic listening, parafoveal vision, and visual masking. A survey and appraisal. Behavioral and Brain Science 9:123. [DS]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kinsbourne, M. (1988) Integrated field theory of consciousness. In: Consciousness in contemporary science, Marcel, A. J. & Bisiach, E., eds. Clarendon Press. [rDCD]Google Scholar
Kinsbourne, M. (1994) Models of consciousness: Serial or parallel in the brain. In: The Cognitive Neurosciences, Gazzaniga, M. S., ed. MIT Press. [rDCD]Google Scholar
Langer, J. (1970) Werner's comparative organismic theory. In: Carmichael's manual of child psychology, Vol. 1, Mussen, P. H., ed. Wiley. [JG]Google Scholar
Labet, B. (1985) Unconscious cerebral initiative and the role of conscious will in voluntary action. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 8: 529–66. [DS]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marcel, A. J. (1980) Conscious and preconscious recognition of polysemous words: Locating the selective efforts of prior verbid context. In Attention and Performance VIII, Nickerson, R. S., ed. Erlbaum. [DS]Google Scholar
Nash, M. (1987) What, if anything, is regressed about hypnotic age regression? A review of the empirical literature. Psychological Bulletin 102:42521. [JG]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Penrose, R. (1989) The emperor's new mind. Oxford University Press. [DS]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Piaget, J. (1970) Piaget's theory. In: Carmiehael's manual of child psychology, Vol. 1m Mussen, P. H., ed. Wiley. [JG]Google Scholar
Pinard, A. & Laurendeau, M. (1969) “Stage” in Piaget's cognitive-developmental theory: Exegesis of a concept. In: Studies in cognitive development: Essays in honor of Jean Piaget, Elkind, D. & Flavell, J. H.. eds.. Oxford University Press. [JG]Google Scholar
Rayner, R. (1983) Eye movements in reading. Academic Press. [DS]Google Scholar
Salter, D. (1970) Delays nnd decisions in language. Ph.D. thesis, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, England.Google Scholar
Salter, D. (1973) Shadowing at one and at two ears. Quarterly Journal of Experitnental Psychology 25:549–56. [DS]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Salter, D. (1989) Voluntary process and the readiness potential: asking the right questions. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12:181–2. [DS]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sellen, A. J. & Norman, D. A. (1992) The psychology of slips. In: Experimental slips and human error, Barr, B.J., ed. Plenum Books. [DS]Google Scholar
Shacter, D. L., McAndrews, M. P. & Moscovitch, M. (1988) Access to consciousness: dissociations between implicit and explicit knowledge in neuropsychological syndrome. In: Thought without language, Weiskrantz, L., ed. Clarendon Press. [DS]Google Scholar
Shaffer, H. (1985) Performances of Chopin, Bach and Bartok: Studies in motor programming. Cognitive Psychology 13:327–76. [DS]Google Scholar
Siegler, R. S. & Crowley, K. (1991) The microgenetic method: A direct means for studying cognitive development. American Psychologist 46:606–20. [JG]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, G. (1957) Visual perception: An event over time. Psychological Review 66:304–13. [JG]Google Scholar
Spanos, N. P. (1986) Hypnotic behavior: A social-psychological interpretation of amnesia, analgesia, and “trance logic.” Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9:449466. [JG]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Werner, H. (1948) Comparative psychology of mental development. International Universities Press. [JG]Google Scholar
Werner, H. (1956) Microgenesis and aphasia. In: Developmental processes: Heinz Werner's selected writings, Vol. 2, Barten, S. S. & Franklin, M. B., eds. International Universities Press [JG]Google Scholar
Werner, H. (1957) The concept of development from a comparative and organismic point of view. In: Developmental processes: Heinz Werner's selected writings. Vol. 1, Barten, S. S. & Franklin, M. B., eds. International Universities Press [JG]Google Scholar