The mechanisms of perceptual learning include attention weighting, imprinting, differentiation, and unitization. With attention weighting, perception becomes adapted to tasks by increasing the attention paid to important dimensions and features.
With imprinting, special receptors are developed that are specialized for specific stimuli.
With differentiation, stimuli that were once indistinguishable become psychologically separated.
With unitization, tasks that originally required detection of several components are accomplished by detecting a single construct (How Perpetual Learning Works, n.d.).
There have been several studies done that have shown that the effects of stimulus exposure time on reaction time. It has been shown that simple reaction time became shorter with increased exposure time. In other words, the longer that someone is exposed to a stimulus the shorter that their reaction time to the stimulus will be. It has also been shown that just being exposed to a stimulus one time increases the reaction to it when exposed to it again. Once exposed to something if you are put into that same situation again you expect to have the same thing happen and thus you are expecting a reaction (Learning, 2008).
Learning is a continuous reaction to stimuli that is around us. Simple stimulus learning is only one type of learning. We are constantly being exposed...
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