Quak Michel, Pecher Diane, Zeelenberg Rene
Department of Psychology, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Rotterdam, The Netherlands,
Atten Percept Psychophys. 2014 Oct;76(7):2063-70. doi: 10.3758/s13414-014-0654-y.
Grounded-cognition theories suggest that memory shares processing resources with perception and action. The motor system could be used to help memorize visual objects. In two experiments, we tested the hypothesis that people use motor affordances to maintain object representations in working memory. Participants performed a working memory task on photographs of manipulable and nonmanipulable objects. The manipulable objects were objects that required either a precision grip (i.e., small items) or a power grip (i.e., large items) to use. A concurrent motor task that could be congruent or incongruent with the manipulable objects caused no difference in working memory performance relative to nonmanipulable objects. Moreover, the precision- or power-grip motor task did not affect memory performance on small and large items differently. These findings suggest that the motor system plays no part in visual working memory.
具身认知理论认为,记忆与感知和行动共享处理资源。运动系统可用于帮助记忆视觉对象。在两项实验中,我们测试了这样一个假设,即人们利用运动可供性在工作记忆中维持物体表征。参与者对可操纵和不可操纵物体的照片执行工作记忆任务。可操纵物体是那些使用时需要精确抓握(即小物件)或强力抓握(即大物件)的物体。一项与可操纵物体一致或不一致的并发运动任务,相对于不可操纵物体,在工作记忆表现上没有差异。此外,精确抓握或强力抓握的运动任务对小物件和大物件的记忆表现影响并无不同。这些发现表明,运动系统在视觉工作记忆中不起作用。