Skip to content

Aman Taxali

Department of Psychiatry and Philosophy, Michigan Medicine, University of Michigan, MI, USA.

1 paper in the library · 13 citations · publishing 2025

Papers

Opening the black box: Think Aloud as a method to study the spontaneous stream of consciousness.

Consciousness and cognition February 1, 2025 Anusha Garg, Shivang Shelat, Madeleine E Gross et al. 13 citations

Thinking aloud while letting the mind wander does not substantially alter the stream of consciousness compared to thinking silently. In two studies with 111 and 102 participants, people who verbalized their ongoing thoughts showed no significant differences in meta-awareness or how often their topics shifted. Of 21 thought qualities and 18 content topics examined, only three qualities (private thoughts, mind blanking, and session difficulty) and one topic (partner, intimacy, love, and sexual matters) differed between conditions. Cognitive load also did not differ. The findings indicate that the Think Aloud method is a reliable and minimally reactive tool for studying the natural flow of thoughts in task-absent settings.