
Major Authoritative Scientific Publications on IntuitionIntuition, often described as rapid, unconscious decision-making or “gut feeling,” has been extensively studied in fields like psychology, neuroscience, and cognitive science.
Below, we present a curated selection of seminal papers and books that are widely regarded as authoritative due to their high citation impact, foundational contributions to dual-process theories (intuitive vs. analytic thinking), and integration of empirical evidence from experiments, neuroimaging, and behavioral studies.
These works bridge theoretical frameworks with practical implications for decision-making, expertise, and neural mechanisms.
We’ve organized them into categories for clarity, focusing on English-language publications. Each entry includes a brief summary of its key contributions and why it’s influential.
Seminal Journal Articles and Reviews
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Title
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Authors
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Year
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Journal/Publication
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Key Contributions and Influence
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|---|---|---|---|---|
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Intuition: A Social Cognitive Neuroscience Approach
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Matthew D. Lieberman
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2000
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Psychological Bulletin, 126(1), 109–137
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Proposes implicit learning as the cognitive foundation of social intuition, linking it to basal ganglia function. Highly cited (over 1,500 times) for bridging social psychology and neuroscience, influencing dual-process models.
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What Neuroscience Can Tell About Intuitive Processes in the Context of Perceptual Discovery
pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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Kirsten G. Volz & D. Yves von Cramon
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2006
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Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 18(12), 2077–2087
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Uses fMRI to show orbitofrontal cortex and amygdala activation during intuitive judgments, distinguishing intuition from deliberate reasoning. Foundational for neuroscientific models of “gut feelings” in discovery tasks.
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Intuition and Insight: Two Processes That Build on Each Other or Fundamentally Differ?
pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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Gerlinde A. Steiner & Petra L. Klumb
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2016
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Frontiers in Psychology, 7, 1175
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Compares intuition (holistic hunches) and insight (sudden recombinations) via meta-analysis, highlighting shared non-analytic roots but distinct neural paths. Influential in clarifying overlaps with creativity and problem-solving.
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Measuring Intuition: Nonconscious Emotional Information Boosts Decision Accuracy and Confidence
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Galang Lufityanto, Chris Donkin, & Joel Pearson
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2016
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Psychological Science, 27(5), 704–713
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Develops a novel method to quantify intuition via subliminal emotional cues, showing it enhances speed and accuracy. Seminal for empirical measurement, cited in over 300 studies on unconscious biases.
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Intuition, Insight, and the Right Hemisphere: Emergence of Higher Sociocognitive Functions
pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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John S. Allen, Hanna Damasio, & Antonio R. Damasio
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2011
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Psychology Research and Behavior Management, 4, 55–64
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Links intuition to right-hemisphere processing and basal ganglia-cortical interactions, using case studies. Authoritative for sociocognitive neuroscience, emphasizing intuition’s role in empathy and social judgment.
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Influential Books on the Scientific Study of Intuition
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Title
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Author(s)
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Year
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Publisher
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Key Contributions and Influence
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|---|---|---|---|---|
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Thinking, Fast and Slow
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Daniel Kahneman
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2011
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Farrar, Straus and Giroux
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Explores System 1 (intuitive, fast) vs. System 2 (deliberate, slow) thinking, drawing on decades of prospect theory research. Nobel Prize-winning insights; over 10 million copies sold, foundational for behavioral economics and decision science.
goodreads.com
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Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking
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Malcolm Gladwell
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2005
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Little, Brown and Company
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Popularizes rapid cognition through case studies (e.g., art forgery detection), blending psychology with real-world examples. Highly accessible; cited in over 5,000 papers for highlighting intuition’s adaptive and error-prone sides.
goodreads.com
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Educating Intuition
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Robin M. Hogarth
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2001
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University of Chicago Press
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Argues intuition is “learned” via experience, proposing “kind” vs. “wicked” learning environments. Seminal for management and education, influencing training programs in high-stakes fields like medicine and finance.
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Intuition: Its Powers and Perils
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David G. Myers
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2002
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Yale University Press
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Reviews psychological evidence on intuition’s reliability, pitfalls (e.g., biases), and enhancement strategies. Balanced scientific overview; praised for demystifying intuition without dismissing it.
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Understanding Intuition: A Journey In and Out of Science
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Lois Isenman
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2018
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Academic Press (Elsevier)
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Integrates biology, neuroscience, and first-person accounts to frame intuition as unconscious pattern recognition with emotional roots. Authoritative for interdisciplinary synthesis, emphasizing somatic signals in high-level insight.
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These publications represent core pillars in the field, often cross-cited in meta-analyses and textbooks. For instance, Kahneman’s dual-process framework underpins much of the neuroscience work (e.g., Lieberman, Volz). Recent reviews, like those in Frontiers in Psychology (2021), build on these by incorporating AI and organizational applications.

