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Interference effects in recalling movements

W D Walsh, D G Russell, B Crassini

    British Journal of Psychology (London, England : 1953)
    |August 1, 1981
    PubMed
    Summary
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    Memory for movements involves both location and distance cues. Even when focusing on one cue, the other interferes, suggesting combined memory traces for recalled movements.

    Area of Science:

    • Motor control and learning
    • Human movement science
    • Cognitive psychology

    Background:

    • Recalling movements involves remembering specific parameters.
    • The interplay between different sensory cues in motor memory is not fully understood.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To investigate how location and distance cues interact during the recall of pre-selected movements.
    • To determine if memory for movements is based on a single cue or a combination of cues.

    Main Methods:

    • Two experiments were conducted with participants recalling pre-selected movements.
    • Participants were cued to remember either movement location or distance.
    • Retention intervals varied (5s, 30s unfilled; 20s filled/unfilled).
    • Recall movements were analyzed for interference from the unattended cue.

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    Main Results:

    • Participants could not recall movements without influence from the unattended cue (location or distance).
    • The interference effect was consistent regardless of the retention interval's nature (filled or unfilled).

    Conclusions:

    • Memory for pre-selected movements is not based on a single cue.
    • Motor memory appears to integrate both location and distance information generated during movement production.