Structure in the stream of consciousness: Evidence from a verbalized thought protocol and automated text analytic methods

Conscious Cogn. 2020 Oct:85:103007. doi: 10.1016/j.concog.2020.103007. Epub 2020 Sep 22.

Abstract

A key question about the spontaneous stream of thought (SST), often called the stream of consciousness, concerns its serial structure: How are thoughts in an extended sequence related to each other? In this study, we used a verbalized thought protocol to investigate "clump-and-jump" structure in SST-clusters of related thoughts about a topic followed by a jump to a new topic, in a repeating pattern. Several lines of evidence convergently supported the presence of clump-and-jump structure: high interrater agreement in identifying jumps, corroboration of rater-assigned jumps by automated text analytic methods, identification of clumps and jumps by a data-driven algorithm, and the inferred presence of clumps and jumps in unverbalized SST. We also found evidence that jumps involve a discontinuous shift in which a new clump is only modestly related to the previous one. These results illuminate serial structure in SST and invite research into the processes that generate the clump-and-jump pattern.

Keywords: Mind wandering; Natural language processing; Spontaneous thought; Stream of consciousness; Text analytics; Thinking.

MeSH terms

  • Consciousness*
  • Humans