Allen Richard J, Waterman Amanda H
School of Psychology, University of Leeds, Leeds, LS2 9JT, UK,
Mem Cognit. 2015 Apr;43(3):555-61. doi: 10.3758/s13421-014-0481-3.
Recent studies examining working memory for sequences of instructions have demonstrated a performance advantage when the instructions are physically enacted rather than verbally recalled. However, little is known about the source of this effect, or how instructions are stored in working memory more generally. In particular, no previous studies have compared the impacts of enactment on encoding versus recall in working memory. We conducted an experiment to examine the impacts of enactment on both the encoding and recall phases of a task measuring memory for sequences of simple action-object pairs (e.g., touch the circle, spin the cross, flip the square, . . .) in young adult participants. An advantage for enacted over verbal recall was observed, in line with recent evidence. In addition, the enactment of actions during the encoding phase on each trial significantly facilitated subsequent performance; this effect was particularly apparent for verbal repetition rather than enacted recall. These findings are interpreted as reflecting a beneficial role for spatial-motoric coding in working memory that can be engaged through either action planning or physical performance.
最近关于指令序列工作记忆的研究表明,当指令通过实际执行而非口头回忆时,表现更具优势。然而,对于这种效应的来源,或者指令在工作记忆中一般是如何存储的,人们知之甚少。特别是,以前没有研究比较过执行对工作记忆中编码与回忆的影响。我们进行了一项实验,以检验执行对年轻成年参与者记忆简单动作 - 对象对序列(例如,触摸圆形、旋转十字、翻转正方形……)任务的编码和回忆阶段的影响。与最近的证据一致,观察到实际执行比口头回忆更具优势。此外,在每次试验的编码阶段进行动作执行显著促进了后续表现;这种效应在口头重复而非实际执行回忆时尤为明显。这些发现被解释为反映了空间 - 运动编码在工作记忆中的有益作用,这种作用可以通过动作规划或实际表现来实现。