Definition:
Implicit knowledge is unconscious, procedural knowledge that underlies fluent language performance. Unlike explicit knowledge, it cannot be easily stated or explained — skilled speakers often cannot articulate the rules they follow, yet apply them consistently and automatically.
Characteristics of Implicit Knowledge
| Feature | Description |
|---|---|
| Unconscious | Speakers cannot usually describe the rules they are applying |
| Automatic | Accessed without deliberate attention — fast and effortless |
| Intuition-based | Reveals itself as a feeling that something is “right” or “wrong” |
| Basis of fluency | All fluent, spontaneous language use ultimately rests on implicit knowledge |
How Implicit Knowledge is Acquired
The dominant view in SLA is that implicit knowledge is built through extensive comprehensible exposure to the target language over time, as the brain detects and internalises statistical patterns. This is why massive input — reading, listening, and meaningful interaction — is considered the engine of genuine language acquisition.
Implicit Knowledge and Instruction
Grammar instruction directly produces explicit knowledge. Whether this explicit knowledge can become implicit knowledge through practice is the central question of the interface debate in SLA:
- Non-interface view (Krashen): Explicit and implicit systems are entirely separate — instruction helps learners monitor but does not fuel acquisition
- Weak interface view (Schmidt, Ellis): Explicit knowledge can facilitate acquisition by drawing noticing attention to forms
- Strong interface view: Explicit knowledge can directly become implicit knowledge through extensive practice
Measuring Implicit Knowledge
Implicit knowledge is typically measured with tasks that do not allow monitoring: oral judgment tasks under time pressure, spontaneous speech, or reaction-time-based grammaticality judgments. Tasks that allow unlimited time may tap explicit knowledge instead.