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Richard Carlson, Ph.D.

Richard

Carlson

Ph.D.

Professor of Psychology
Preferred Pronouns: he/him/his
445 Moore Building University Park, Pa 16802
(814) 865-9514

Curriculum Vitae

Education

Ph. D., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1984

Professional Bio

Research Interests

My research focus is on the conscious control of skilled mental activity, and how control and experience change with increasing skill. This research is guided by a theory of consciousness described in my bookExperienced Cognition (1997). My students and I study the fine-grained structure of deliberate control in complex tasks such as symbolic and spatial problem solving and reasoning. We are currently developing a model of the time course of deliberate control, tracing the evolution of goal representations in stages: plan, intention, procedure, outcome representation. These stages occur at each step of complex mental activity, on a time scale of a second or so. The model emphasizes the importance of processes for coordination, placekeeping, and monitoring.

Recent empirical work emphasizes the roles of affect (emotional valence) and cognitive load in achieving deliberate control of fluent mental activities. Our college-student participants find tasks such as counting on-screen events and performing running arithmetic quite challenging, despite the highly-skilled nature of the component skills for these tasks. Such tasks therefore provide rich paradigms for understanding control, and for developing a theory of deliberate control.

Recent Publications

Cassenti, D.N. & Carlson, R.A. (2008).  Effect of pacing and working memory loads on error type patterns in a routine skill. American Journal of Psychology, 121, 57-81.

Carlson, R.A., Avraamides, M.N., Cary, M., & Strasberg, S.  (2007). What do the hands externalize in simple arithmetic?  Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition33, 747-756.

Bruce, A.S., Ray, W.J., Bruce, J.M., Arnett, P.A. & Carlson, R.A. (2007).  The relationship between executive functioning and dissociation. Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology, 29, 626-633.

Bruce, A.S., Ray, W.J., & Carlson, R.A. (2007).  Understanding cognitive failures: What’s dissociation got to do with it? American Journal of Psychology, 120, 553-563.

Carlson, R.A. (2007). Intentions, errors, and experience. In W.D. Gray (Ed.), Integrated models of cognitive systems, pp. 388-399.  New York: Oxford University Press.

Carlson, R.A. & Cassenti, D.N. (2004). Intentional control of event counting. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition30, 1235-1251.

Stevenson, L.M. & Carlson, R.A. (2003). Information acquisition strategies and the cognitive structure of arithmetic. Memory & Cognition, 31, 1249-1259.

Sohn, M.-H. & Carlson, R.A. (2003). Viewpoint alignment and response conflict during spatial judgment.Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 10, 907-916.

Sohn, M.-H. & Carlson, R.A. (2003). Implicit temporal tuning of working memory strategy during cognitive skill acquisition. American Journal of Psychology, 116, 239-256.

Avraamides, M.N. & Carlson, R.A. (2003). Egocentric organization of spatial activities in imagined navigation.Memory & Cognition, 31, 252-261.

Carlson, R.A. (2003). Skill learning. In The Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science.  Macmillan Reference Ltd

Carlson, R.A. (1997). Experienced Cognition. Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.

Richard Carlson
Richard Carlson