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Related Experiment Video

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The "Motor" in Implicit Motor Sequence Learning: A Foot-stepping Serial Reaction Time Task
10:39

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Published on: May 3, 2018

Encoding the world around us: motor-related processing influences verbal memory.

Christopher R Madan1, Anthony Singhal

  • 1Department of Psychology, University of Alberta, Canada. cmadan@ualberta.ca

Consciousness and Cognition
|August 7, 2012
PubMed
Summary

Object manipulability influences word memory. High-manipulability words are remembered better than low-manipulability words, except when processing focuses on functionality, suggesting motor-cognition mediation.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Neuroscience
  • Linguistics

Background:

  • Word properties like imageability affect memory recall.
  • The impact of object-related properties, such as manipulability, on memory remains under-investigated.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate if object manipulability influences memory representations.
  • To compare memory for high-manipulability words versus low-manipulability words.

Main Methods:

  • Participants incidentally encoded high- and low-manipulability words via word judgments.
  • A between-subjects design manipulated depth-of-processing: personal experience (deep), word length (shallow), or functionality (intermediate).

Main Results:

  • High-manipulability words were recalled better than low-manipulability words in personal experience and word length conditions.
  • An interaction revealed better recall for low-manipulability words in the functionality condition.

Conclusions:

  • Object manipulability significantly influences word memory.
  • The findings suggest motor-related cognition mediates the relationship between manipulability and memory, depending on processing depth.