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Autonomy, language learning, 
and the brain 
Phil Benson 
Macquarie University 
Presentation at JALT 2014 Conference, 
Tsukuba, Japan
Autonomy – definition 
‘…the capacity to take control of one’s 
own learning…’ 
Benson, P. (2011) Teaching and Researching Autonomy. London: Pearson. (p. 58)
Controlling what? 
Learning 
management 
Learning 
content 
Cognitive 
processes 
AUTONOMY
Control over what? 
Learning 
management 
Learning 
content 
Cognitive 
processes 
AUTONOMY
Control over cognition 
• …is metacognitive in the sense that it is 
– not concerned with direct control of behaviour 
(learning management/content) 
– is concerned with control of the cognitive 
processes that control behaviour 
• … it involves 
– control over attention 
– reflection 
– metacognitive (metalinguistic) knowledge
Control of attention 
‘The human animal is an attentive animal…. Our 
attention enables us to organize the field in which 
we are going to act. Here we have the organism as 
acting and determining its environment. It is not 
simply a set of passive senses played upon by the 
stimuli that come from without [the behaviourist 
view]. The organism goes out and determines what 
it is going to respond to and organizes that world’ 
Mead, G. H. (1934). Mind, self and society: The viewpoint of a 
social behaviorist. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
How important is control of cognition 
to a theory of autonomy? 
“The nature of the autonomous learner’s 
psychological relation to the learning process is 
often described in general attitudinal terms or in 
terms of capacities for ‘detachment’, ‘critical 
thinking’, ‘creativity’, and so on. Here, I have 
hypothesized that it may be described more 
precisely as a capacity to control certain cognitive 
processes that are central to the management of 
language learning’ 
(Benson 2011: 112)
Neuroscience 
• Thought and ideas are physical (Lakoff 2013) 
• Mapping behaviour and thinking onto brain activity 
– electrical activity (EEG) / blood flow (PET) / blood 
oxygenation (fMRI) 
– Locate activity in regions of the brain / neural networks 
• Applications 
– Educational neuroscience (Goswami 2006) 
– Neurolinguistics (deGroot 2011; Ellis 2008) 
– Neurosociology (Franks and Turner 2013) 
– Neuroeconomics (Camerer, Loewenstein and Prelec 2005)
Neuroscience and decision-making 
“The capacity to take long-term 
consequences of our behaviour into 
account seems to be the product of 
our prefrontal cortex, which, tellingly 
is the part of the brain that is uniquely 
human.” 
Camerer et al. 2005: 39
Controlled vs. automatic processes 
Controlled Automatic 
Serial (step-by-step) 
Deliberative / Explicit 
Effortful 
Accessible to introspection 
e.g., solving a mathematical 
problem 
Multiple and parallel 
Reflexive / Implicit 
Effortless 
Not accessible to introspection 
e.g., visual recognition, 
language processing
Cognitive vs affective processes 
Cognitive processes Affective processes 
Concerned with ‘yes/no’ 
questions 
Work with affective processes 
to produce action 
Can control affective processes 
Concerned with ‘go/no go’ 
questions 
Work with cognitive processes 
to produce action 
Can override cognitive 
processes
Four quadrants 
Cognitive + 
controlled 
Affective + controlled 
Cognitive + automatic Affective + automatic
Foor challenges from neuroscience 
1. Implicit learning cannot be controlled 
2. We exagerrate the role control 
3. Decision making depends on affect 
4. Control may not lead to good decisions
1. Implicit learning cannot be controlled 
• Much brain activity (both affective and cognitive) 
is automatized and inaccessible to introspection 
and control 
• Controlled processes only come into play when 
automatic processes are interrupted 
• Much of language processing involves automatic 
processes and is implicit 
• Much L2 learning is implicit, though conscious 
control is also needed to overcome non-optimal 
L1 implicit processes (Ellis 2008)
2. We exagerrate the role of control 
• Introspective access to cognitively controlled 
processes is much stronger than access to 
automated processes 
• We exagerrate the degree to which we control 
our behaviour – it is the controlling part of the 
brain that thinks it is in control 
• Brain activity that initiates behaviour is 
recorded 300 msec before the activity 
associated with intention
3. Decision making depends on affect 
• Cognition is insufficient in itself to cause 
action without the support of emotion 
processes 
• “The affective system provides inputs in the 
form of affective evaluations of behavioral 
options…. It is not enough to ‘know’ what 
should be done; it is also necessary to ‘feel’ 
it.” (Camerer et al 2005: 29)
4. Control may not lead to good decisions 
• Deliberative thinking blocks access to 
emotional reactions influences the quality of 
decisions 
• Decision-making draws resources from the 
cognitive regions of the brain and affects the 
quality of later cognitive activity 
• People who reflect upon and give reasons for 
their decisions do not necessarily make better 
decisions.
Recent critiques of autonomy 
• Role of English as a lingua franca and in CMC is leading 
to a shift in emphasis from language learning to 
language use. 
• “Learners can be considered autonomous only if they 
can meet the increased problem-solving demands the 
use of English in international and CMC settings 
presents” (p. 512). 
• A shift of emphasis in the definition of learner 
autonomy away from control of teaching and learning 
processes (which are best left to the pedagogical 
expertise of teachers) to control over language use. 
Illés (2012)
Recent critiques of autonomy 
“The research hypothesis of this study is that 
the learner autonomy model is no longer 
pertinent to the learning of English in France 
today, since language use and implicit learning 
are already taking place through everyday 
communicative activities in virtual 
communities.” 
Sockett and Toffoli (2012: 140)
Implications from neuroscience 
• Treat findings from neuroscience cautiously – they are 
often over-interpreted and turn out to be more complex 
than than they seem 
• They support a shift away from rational-deliberative 
models of autonomy based on planning, decision-making 
and reflection 
• They support a shift towards more intuitive-responsive 
models that incorporate implicit learning and emotion 
• Our models of autonomy should not be bound to the 
prefrontal cortex; they should account for language 
learning as a complex process involving both controlled and 
automatic processes, and cognition and affect 
•
References 
Benson, P. (2011). Teaching and Researching Autonomy (Second Edition, first published, 2001). 
London: Pearson Education. 
Camerer, C., Loewenstein, G., Prelec, D. (2005). Neuroeconomics: How neuroscience can inform 
economics. Journal of Economic Literature, 43, 9-64. 
deGroot, A. M. B. (2011). language and cognition in bilinguals and multilinguals. New York, NY: 
Psychology Press. 
Ellis, N. (2008). Implicit and explicit knowledge about language. In J. Cenoz and N. H. Hornberger 
(Eds.), Encyclopedia of language and education (Second Edition), Volume 6 (pp. 1-13). New York, 
NY: Springer. 
Franks, D. D. and Turner, J. H. (Eds.) (2013). Handbook of neurosociology. Dordrecht: Springer. 
Goswami, U. (2006). Neuroscience and education: From research to practice. Nature reviews 
Neuroscience, 7, 406-413. 
Illés, E. (2012). Learner autonomy revisited. ELT Journal, 66 (4), 505-513 
Lakoff, G. (2013). Neural social science. In D. D. Franks and J. H. Turner (Eds.), Handbook of 
neurosociology (pp. 9-26). Dordrecht: Springer. 
Mead, G. H. (1934). Mind, self, and society from the standpoint of a social behaviorist. Chicago: 
University of Chicago Press. 
Sockett, G., and Toffoli, D. (2012). Beyond learner autonomy: A dynamic systems view of the 
informal learning of English in virtual online communities. ReCALL, 24 (2), 138-151.

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Autonomy and the brain

  • 1. Autonomy, language learning, and the brain Phil Benson Macquarie University Presentation at JALT 2014 Conference, Tsukuba, Japan
  • 2. Autonomy – definition ‘…the capacity to take control of one’s own learning…’ Benson, P. (2011) Teaching and Researching Autonomy. London: Pearson. (p. 58)
  • 3. Controlling what? Learning management Learning content Cognitive processes AUTONOMY
  • 4. Control over what? Learning management Learning content Cognitive processes AUTONOMY
  • 5. Control over cognition • …is metacognitive in the sense that it is – not concerned with direct control of behaviour (learning management/content) – is concerned with control of the cognitive processes that control behaviour • … it involves – control over attention – reflection – metacognitive (metalinguistic) knowledge
  • 6. Control of attention ‘The human animal is an attentive animal…. Our attention enables us to organize the field in which we are going to act. Here we have the organism as acting and determining its environment. It is not simply a set of passive senses played upon by the stimuli that come from without [the behaviourist view]. The organism goes out and determines what it is going to respond to and organizes that world’ Mead, G. H. (1934). Mind, self and society: The viewpoint of a social behaviorist. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • 7. How important is control of cognition to a theory of autonomy? “The nature of the autonomous learner’s psychological relation to the learning process is often described in general attitudinal terms or in terms of capacities for ‘detachment’, ‘critical thinking’, ‘creativity’, and so on. Here, I have hypothesized that it may be described more precisely as a capacity to control certain cognitive processes that are central to the management of language learning’ (Benson 2011: 112)
  • 8. Neuroscience • Thought and ideas are physical (Lakoff 2013) • Mapping behaviour and thinking onto brain activity – electrical activity (EEG) / blood flow (PET) / blood oxygenation (fMRI) – Locate activity in regions of the brain / neural networks • Applications – Educational neuroscience (Goswami 2006) – Neurolinguistics (deGroot 2011; Ellis 2008) – Neurosociology (Franks and Turner 2013) – Neuroeconomics (Camerer, Loewenstein and Prelec 2005)
  • 9. Neuroscience and decision-making “The capacity to take long-term consequences of our behaviour into account seems to be the product of our prefrontal cortex, which, tellingly is the part of the brain that is uniquely human.” Camerer et al. 2005: 39
  • 10.
  • 11. Controlled vs. automatic processes Controlled Automatic Serial (step-by-step) Deliberative / Explicit Effortful Accessible to introspection e.g., solving a mathematical problem Multiple and parallel Reflexive / Implicit Effortless Not accessible to introspection e.g., visual recognition, language processing
  • 12. Cognitive vs affective processes Cognitive processes Affective processes Concerned with ‘yes/no’ questions Work with affective processes to produce action Can control affective processes Concerned with ‘go/no go’ questions Work with cognitive processes to produce action Can override cognitive processes
  • 13. Four quadrants Cognitive + controlled Affective + controlled Cognitive + automatic Affective + automatic
  • 14. Foor challenges from neuroscience 1. Implicit learning cannot be controlled 2. We exagerrate the role control 3. Decision making depends on affect 4. Control may not lead to good decisions
  • 15. 1. Implicit learning cannot be controlled • Much brain activity (both affective and cognitive) is automatized and inaccessible to introspection and control • Controlled processes only come into play when automatic processes are interrupted • Much of language processing involves automatic processes and is implicit • Much L2 learning is implicit, though conscious control is also needed to overcome non-optimal L1 implicit processes (Ellis 2008)
  • 16. 2. We exagerrate the role of control • Introspective access to cognitively controlled processes is much stronger than access to automated processes • We exagerrate the degree to which we control our behaviour – it is the controlling part of the brain that thinks it is in control • Brain activity that initiates behaviour is recorded 300 msec before the activity associated with intention
  • 17. 3. Decision making depends on affect • Cognition is insufficient in itself to cause action without the support of emotion processes • “The affective system provides inputs in the form of affective evaluations of behavioral options…. It is not enough to ‘know’ what should be done; it is also necessary to ‘feel’ it.” (Camerer et al 2005: 29)
  • 18. 4. Control may not lead to good decisions • Deliberative thinking blocks access to emotional reactions influences the quality of decisions • Decision-making draws resources from the cognitive regions of the brain and affects the quality of later cognitive activity • People who reflect upon and give reasons for their decisions do not necessarily make better decisions.
  • 19. Recent critiques of autonomy • Role of English as a lingua franca and in CMC is leading to a shift in emphasis from language learning to language use. • “Learners can be considered autonomous only if they can meet the increased problem-solving demands the use of English in international and CMC settings presents” (p. 512). • A shift of emphasis in the definition of learner autonomy away from control of teaching and learning processes (which are best left to the pedagogical expertise of teachers) to control over language use. Illés (2012)
  • 20. Recent critiques of autonomy “The research hypothesis of this study is that the learner autonomy model is no longer pertinent to the learning of English in France today, since language use and implicit learning are already taking place through everyday communicative activities in virtual communities.” Sockett and Toffoli (2012: 140)
  • 21. Implications from neuroscience • Treat findings from neuroscience cautiously – they are often over-interpreted and turn out to be more complex than than they seem • They support a shift away from rational-deliberative models of autonomy based on planning, decision-making and reflection • They support a shift towards more intuitive-responsive models that incorporate implicit learning and emotion • Our models of autonomy should not be bound to the prefrontal cortex; they should account for language learning as a complex process involving both controlled and automatic processes, and cognition and affect •
  • 22. References Benson, P. (2011). Teaching and Researching Autonomy (Second Edition, first published, 2001). London: Pearson Education. Camerer, C., Loewenstein, G., Prelec, D. (2005). Neuroeconomics: How neuroscience can inform economics. Journal of Economic Literature, 43, 9-64. deGroot, A. M. B. (2011). language and cognition in bilinguals and multilinguals. New York, NY: Psychology Press. Ellis, N. (2008). Implicit and explicit knowledge about language. In J. Cenoz and N. H. Hornberger (Eds.), Encyclopedia of language and education (Second Edition), Volume 6 (pp. 1-13). New York, NY: Springer. Franks, D. D. and Turner, J. H. (Eds.) (2013). Handbook of neurosociology. Dordrecht: Springer. Goswami, U. (2006). Neuroscience and education: From research to practice. Nature reviews Neuroscience, 7, 406-413. Illés, E. (2012). Learner autonomy revisited. ELT Journal, 66 (4), 505-513 Lakoff, G. (2013). Neural social science. In D. D. Franks and J. H. Turner (Eds.), Handbook of neurosociology (pp. 9-26). Dordrecht: Springer. Mead, G. H. (1934). Mind, self, and society from the standpoint of a social behaviorist. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Sockett, G., and Toffoli, D. (2012). Beyond learner autonomy: A dynamic systems view of the informal learning of English in virtual online communities. ReCALL, 24 (2), 138-151.