PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

How some skills become second nature

Patterns of gaze and attention can reveal how some people unconsciously figure out how to master a task, new research shows.

2026-03-04
(Press-News.org)

Expertise isn’t easy to pass down. Take riding a bike: A seasoned cyclist might talk a beginner through the basics of how to sit and when to push off. But other skills, like how hard to pedal to keep balanced, are more intuitive and harder to articulate. This implicit know-how is known as tacit knowledge, and very often, it can only be learned with experience and time. 

But a team of MIT engineers wondered: Could an expert’s unconscious know-how be accessed, and even taught, to quickly bring a novice up to an expert’s level? 

The answer appears to be “yes,” at least for a particular type of visual-learning task. 

In a study published today in the Journal of Neural Engineering, the engineers identified tacit knowledge in volunteers who were tasked with classifying images of various shapes and patterns. As the volunteers were shown images to organize, the team recorded their eye movements and brain activity to measure their visual focus and cognitive attention, respectively. 

The measurements showed that, over time, the volunteers shifted their focus and attention to a part of each image that made it easier to classify. However, when asked directly, the volunteers were not aware that they had made such a shift. The researchers concluded that this unconscious shift in attention and focus was a form of tacit knowledge that the volunteers possessed, even if they could not articulate it. What’s more, when the volunteers were made aware of this tacit knowledge, their accuracy in classifying images improved significantly. 

The study is the first to directly show that visual attention can reveal unconscious, tacit knowledge during image classification tasks. It also finds for the first time that bringing this concealed knowledge to the surface can enhance experts’ performance. 

While the results are specific to the study’s experiment, the researchers say they suggest that some forms of hidden know-how can be made explicit and applied to boost one’s learning experience. They suspect that tacit knowledge could be accessed for disciplines that require keen observation skills, including certain physical trades and crafts, sports, and image analysis, such as medical X-ray diagnoses.

“We as humans have a lot of knowledge, some that is explicit that we can translate into books, encyclopedias, manuals, equations. The tacit knowledge is what we cannot verbalize, that’s hidden in our unconscious,” says study author Alex Armengol-Urpi, a research scientist in MIT’s Department of Mechanical Engineering. “If we can make that knowledge explicit, we can then allow for it to be transferred easier, which can help in education and learning in general.”

The study’s co-authors include Andrés F. Salazar-Gomez, research scientist at the MIT Media Lab; Pawan Sinha, professor of vision and computational neuroscience in MIT’s Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences; and Sanjay Sarma, the Fred Fort Flowers (1941) and Daniel Fort Flowers (1941) Professor in Mechanical Engineering.

Hidden gaze

The concept of tacit knowledge is credited to the scientist and philosopher Michael Polyani, who in the mid 20th century was the first to investigate the notion that “we know more than we can tell.” His insights revealed that humans can hold a form of knowledge that is internalized, almost second nature, and often difficult to express or translate to others. 

Since Polyani’s work, many studies have highlighted how tacit knowledge may play a part in perfecting certain skills, spanning everything from diagnosing medical images to discerning the sex of cats from images of their faces. 

For Armengol-Urpi, these studies raised a question: Could a person’s tacit knowledge be revealed through unconscious signals, such as patterns in their eye movements? His PhD work focused on visual attention, and he had developed methods to study how humans focus their attention, by using cameras to follow the direction of their gaze, and electroencephalography (EEG) monitors to record their brain activity. In his research, he learned of a previous study that used similar methods to investigate how radiologists diagnose nodules in X-ray images. That study showed that the doctors unconsciously focused on areas of an image that helped them to correctly detect the nodules. 

“That paper didn’t focus on tacit knowledge, but it suggested that there are some hidden clues in our gaze that could be explored further,” Armengol-Urpi says. 

The shape of knowledge

For their new study, the team looked at whether they could identify signs of tacit knowledge from measurements of visual focus and attention. In their experiment, they asked 30 volunteers to look sequentially at over 120 images. They could look at each image for several seconds and then were asked to classify the image as belonging to either group A, or group B, before they were shown the next image. 

Each image contained two simple shapes on either side of the image — a square, a triangle, a circle, and any combination of the three, along with different colors and patterns for each shape. The researchers designed the images such that they should be classified into one of two groups, based on an intricate combination of shape, color, and pattern. Importantly, only one side of each image was relevant for the classification. 

The volunteers, however, were given no guidelines on how to classify the images. Therefore, for about the first half of the experiment, they were considered “novices,” and more or less guessed at their classifications. Over time, and many more images, their accuracy improved to a level that the researchers considered “expert.” Throughout the experiment, the team used cameras to follow each participant’s eye movements, as a measure of visual focus. 

They also outfitted volunteers with EEG sensors to record their brain waves, which they used as a measure of cognitive attention. They designed each image to show two shapes, each of which flickered at different, imperceptible frequencies. They found they could identify where a volunteer’s attention landed, based on which shape’s flicker their brain waves synced up with. 

For each volunteer, the team created maps of where their gaze and attention were focused, both during their novice and expert phases. Overall, these maps showed that in the beginning, the volunteers focused on all parts of an image as they tried to make sense of how to classify it. Toward the end, as they got a grasp of the exercise and improved their accuracy, their attention shifted to just one side of each image. This side happened to be the side that the researchers designed to be most relevant, while the other side was just random noise. 

The maps showed that the volunteers picked up some knowledge of how to accurately classify the images. But when they were given a survey and asked to articulate how they learned the task, they always maintained that they focused on each entire image. It seemed their actual shift in focus was an unconscious, tacit skill. 

“They were unconsciously focusing their attention on the part of the image that was actually informative,” Armengol-Urpi says. “So the tacit knowledge they had was hidden inside them.”

Going a step further, the team then showed each participant the maps of their gaze and attention, and how the maps changed from their novice to expert phases. When they were then shown additional images, the volunteers seemed to use this once-tacit knowledge, and further improved their classification accuracy. 

“We are currently extending this approach to other domains where tacit knowledge plays a central role,” says Armengol-Urpi, who is exploring tacit knowledge in skilled crafts and sports such as glassblowing and table tennis, as well as in diagnosing medical imaging. “We believe the underlying principle — capturing and reinforcing implicit expertise through physiological signals — can generalize to a wide range of perceptual and skill-based domains.”

This research was supported, in part, by Takeda Pharmaceutical Company.

###

Written by Jennifer Chu, MIT News

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

SFU study sheds light on clotting risks for female astronauts

2026-03-04
Just a few days in simulated microgravity can subtly change the way women’s blood clots, sparking bigger questions about health monitoring protocols for astronauts who can spend six months or more in orbit, say Simon Fraser University researchers.  First reported in 2020, an International Space Station mission detected an unexpected blood clot in a female astronaut’s jugular vein. To date, space-health research has had more male participants but with the number of female astronauts on the rise, a new SFU–European Space Agency study examined how microgravity affects blood clotting specifically ...

UC Irvine chemists shed light on how age-related cataracts may begin

2026-03-04
Irvine, Calif., March 4, 2026 — Cataracts are a leading cause of blindness worldwide and are considered a priority disease by the World Health Organization. In a new study, researchers at the University of California, Irvine uncovered how a subtle chemical change in an eye lens protein can make the protein more likely to clump together over time, suggesting an early step in cataract formation. The research, published in Biophysical Reports, focuses on proteins called crystallins, which help keep the eye lens clear. These proteins are meant to last a lifetime. But unlike most cells in the body, the lens cannot replace damaged proteins, so chemical changes can gradually accumulate ...

Machine learning reveals Raman signatures of liquid-like ion conduction in solid electrolytes

2026-03-04
All-solid-state batteries (ASSB) are widely recognized as a safer and potentially more energy-dense alternative to conventional lithium-ion technologies. Their performance critically depends on fast ionic conduction within solid electrolytes. Traditional methods to identify such materials involve labour-intensive synthesis and characterization processes, often hampered by the limitations of existing computational models in accurately capturing disordered, high-temperature ionic behaviours. The detection and prediction of liquid-like ion motion in crystalline materials has remained a major challenge, particularly because conventional computational ...

Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia researchers emphasize benefits and risks of generative AI at different stages of childhood development

2026-03-04
Philadelphia, March 4, 2026 – The use of generative artificial intelligence (AI), able to produce text, images and video on demand, has grown exponentially in recent years. While its applications for personal and professional use continue to expand, many have questions about how children might be interacting with this technology. In a new state of the review article, researchers from Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) describe the potential benefits and risks to children and adolescents and how these might vary over different age groups. Their findings were published today ...

Why conversation is more like a dance than an exchange of words

2026-03-04
Nijmegen, 27 February 2026 - Think about the last time you told a story to a friend. You probably adjusted it halfway through. You saw their eyebrows lift. You noticed them lean in, or glance away. You clarified a detail. You sped up the ending. That constant fine-tuning is not a bonus feature of communication: it ís communication. And you can read all about this real-time coordination process in a new review by Judith Holler and Anna K. Kuhlen (Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics), published in Nature Reviews Psychology. Holler ...

With Evo 2, AI can model and design the genetic code for all domains of life

2026-03-04
The DNA foundation model Evo 2, first released in February 2025 as a preprint, is now published in the journal Nature. Trained on the DNA of over 100,000 species across the entire tree of life, Evo 2 can identify patterns in gene sequences across disparate organisms that experimental researchers would need years to uncover. The machine learning model can accurately identify disease-causing mutations in human genes and is capable of designing new genomes that are as long as the genomes of simple bacteria. Evo 2 was developed by scientists from Arc Institute and NVIDIA, convening collaborators across Stanford University, UC Berkeley, ...

Discovery of why only some early tumors survive could help catch and treat cancer at very earliest stages

2026-03-04
Cambridge scientists have shown that when tumours first emerge, interactions with healthy cells in the underlying supportive tissue determine their ability to survive, grow, and progress to advanced stages of disease. The study, carried out in mice and further validated using human tissue, may explain why some tiny, newly-formed tumours disappear, while others manage to survive and eventually grow into cancer. Tumours arise when our DNA accumulates errors, or mutations, causing the cells to grow faster and ignore signals that would otherwise instruct ...

Study reveals how gut bacteria and diet can reprogram fat to burn more energy

2026-03-04
LOS ANGELES — Scientists at City of Hope®, one of the largest and most advanced cancer research and treatment organizations in the U.S. and a leading research center for diabetes, the Broad Institute and Keio University have discovered how specific gut bacteria work together with diet to flip a metabolic switch — transforming energy‑storing white fat into calorie‑burning beige fat in mice.  The study, published today in Nature, shows that a low‑protein ...

Mayo Clinic researchers link Parkinson's-related protein to faster Alzheimer's progression in women

2026-03-04
ROCHESTER, Minn. — Alzheimer's-related brain changes progressed up to 20 times faster in women who also had abnormal levels of a Parkinson's-related protein, according to a Mayo Clinic study published in JAMA Network Open. The same pattern was not observed in men. The findings suggest that when alpha-synuclein — a protein linked to Parkinson's disease — accumulates alongside Alzheimer's pathology, it may drive faster disease progression in women. That interaction could help explain a long-standing disparity: women make up nearly two-thirds of ...

Trends in metabolic and bariatric surgery use during the GLP-1 receptor agonist era

2026-03-04
About The Study: Among metabolic and bariatric surgery (MBS)-eligible patients in a national sample, semaglutide and tirzepatide prescriptions increased dramatically between 2018 and 2025, whereas MBS use rates declined substantially beginning in 2023. Stratification by procedure type and body mass index (BMI) category suggests that recent shifts in MBS use may be more pronounced in certain patient subgroups (e.g., those seeking sleeve gastrectomy or with lower BMIs). Corresponding Author: To ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

A promising potential therapeutic strategy for Rett syndrome

How time changes impact public sentiment in the U.S.

Analysis of charred food in pot reveals that prehistoric Europeans had surprisingly complex cuisines

As a whole, LGB+ workers in the NHS do not experience pay gaps compared to their heterosexual colleagues

How cocaine rewires the brain to drive relapse

Mosquito monitoring through sound - implications for AI species recognition

UCLA researchers engineer CAR-T cells to target hard-to-treat solid tumors

New study reveals asynchronous land–ocean responses to ancient ocean anoxia

Ctenophore research points to earlier origins of brain-like structures

Tibet ASγ experiment sheds new light on cosmic rays acceleration and propagation in Milky Way

AI-based liquid biopsy may detect liver fibrosis, cirrhosis and chronic disease signals

Hope for Rett syndrome: New research may unlock treatment pathway for rare disorder with no cure

How some skills become second nature

SFU study sheds light on clotting risks for female astronauts

UC Irvine chemists shed light on how age-related cataracts may begin

Machine learning reveals Raman signatures of liquid-like ion conduction in solid electrolytes

Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia researchers emphasize benefits and risks of generative AI at different stages of childhood development

Why conversation is more like a dance than an exchange of words

With Evo 2, AI can model and design the genetic code for all domains of life

Discovery of why only some early tumors survive could help catch and treat cancer at very earliest stages

Study reveals how gut bacteria and diet can reprogram fat to burn more energy

Mayo Clinic researchers link Parkinson's-related protein to faster Alzheimer's progression in women

Trends in metabolic and bariatric surgery use during the GLP-1 receptor agonist era

Loneliness, anxiety symptoms, depressive symptoms, and suicidal ideation in the all of us dataset

A decision-support system to personalize antidepressant treatment in major depressive disorder

Thunderstorms don’t just appear out of thin air - scientists' key finding to improve forecasting

Automated CT scan analysis could fast-track clinical assessments

New UNC Charlotte study reveals how just three molecules can launch gene-silencing condensates, organizing the epigenome and controlling stem cell differentiation

Oldest known bony fish fossils uncover early vertebrate evolution

High‑performance all‑solid‑state magnesium-air rechargeable battery enabled by metal-free nanoporous graphene

[Press-News.org] How some skills become second nature
Patterns of gaze and attention can reveal how some people unconsciously figure out how to master a task, new research shows.