From comparative studies to interdisciplinary research on metacognition

The goal of this article is to critically examine the notion of metacognition, based on comparative, developmental and neuroscientific publications. A number of researchers define "metacognition" as “knowing what one knows." Others define it more broadly as a set of abilities allowing...

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Main Author: Joëlle Proust
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Animal Behavior and Cognition 2019-11-01
Series:Animal Behavior and Cognition
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.animalbehaviorandcognition.org/uploads/journals/25/AB_C_2019_Vol6(4)_Proust.pdf
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author Joëlle Proust
author_facet Joëlle Proust
author_sort Joëlle Proust
collection DOAJ
description The goal of this article is to critically examine the notion of metacognition, based on comparative, developmental and neuroscientific publications. A number of researchers define "metacognition" as “knowing what one knows." Others define it more broadly as a set of abilities allowing an individual to control and monitor his/her own cognitive activity" – where "cognitive activity" is taken to mean "activity with an informational goal." Developmental, neuroscientific and comparative studies, however, show that cognitive agents can pursue informational goals and reliably monitor them without representing their own mental states as mental states: they enjoy "procedural" metacognition. Various objections raised in the literature against this hypothesis are discussed, such as the kind of reinforcement at work in metacognition, and the role of metacognitive awareness in human and nonhuman decision-making. Finally, Peter Carruthers' first-order account of the comparative and developmental evidence of metacognition in terms of "basic questioning" is compared with the account in terms of procedural metacognition.
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spelling doaj.art-4597a27577c94d40bad01faca01e03222022-12-22T03:48:37ZengAnimal Behavior and CognitionAnimal Behavior and Cognition2372-50522372-43232019-11-016430932810.26451/abc.06.04.10.2019From comparative studies to interdisciplinary research on metacognitionJoëlle Proust The goal of this article is to critically examine the notion of metacognition, based on comparative, developmental and neuroscientific publications. A number of researchers define "metacognition" as “knowing what one knows." Others define it more broadly as a set of abilities allowing an individual to control and monitor his/her own cognitive activity" – where "cognitive activity" is taken to mean "activity with an informational goal." Developmental, neuroscientific and comparative studies, however, show that cognitive agents can pursue informational goals and reliably monitor them without representing their own mental states as mental states: they enjoy "procedural" metacognition. Various objections raised in the literature against this hypothesis are discussed, such as the kind of reinforcement at work in metacognition, and the role of metacognitive awareness in human and nonhuman decision-making. Finally, Peter Carruthers' first-order account of the comparative and developmental evidence of metacognition in terms of "basic questioning" is compared with the account in terms of procedural metacognition.http://www.animalbehaviorandcognition.org/uploads/journals/25/AB_C_2019_Vol6(4)_Proust.pdfmetacognitive developmentfluencyprocedural metacognitionreinforcement learningnon-human self-awarenessevolution of consciousness
spellingShingle Joëlle Proust
From comparative studies to interdisciplinary research on metacognition
Animal Behavior and Cognition
metacognitive development
fluency
procedural metacognition
reinforcement learning
non-human self-awareness
evolution of consciousness
title From comparative studies to interdisciplinary research on metacognition
title_full From comparative studies to interdisciplinary research on metacognition
title_fullStr From comparative studies to interdisciplinary research on metacognition
title_full_unstemmed From comparative studies to interdisciplinary research on metacognition
title_short From comparative studies to interdisciplinary research on metacognition
title_sort from comparative studies to interdisciplinary research on metacognition
topic metacognitive development
fluency
procedural metacognition
reinforcement learning
non-human self-awareness
evolution of consciousness
url http://www.animalbehaviorandcognition.org/uploads/journals/25/AB_C_2019_Vol6(4)_Proust.pdf
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