Jaroslawska Agnieszka J, Gathercole Susan E, Holmes Joni
1 School of Philosophy, Psychology & Language Sciences, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.
2 MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
Q J Exp Psychol (Hove). 2018 Nov;71(11):2439-2449. doi: 10.1177/1747021817743492. Epub 2018 Jan 1.
Evidence from dual-task studies suggests that working memory supports the retention and implementation of verbal instructions. One key finding that is not readily accommodated by existing models of working memory is that participants are consistently more accurate at physically performing rather than verbally repeating a sequence of commands. This action advantage has no obvious source within the multi-component model of working memory and has been proposed to be driven by an as yet undetected limited-capacity store dedicated to the temporary maintenance of spatial, motoric, and temporal features of intended movements. To test this hypothesis, we sought to selectively disrupt the action advantage with concurrent motor suppression. In three dual-task experiments, young adults' immediate memory for sequences of spoken instructions was assessed by both action-based and spoken recall. In addition to classic interference tasks known to tax the phonological loop and central executive, motor suppression tasks designed to impair the encoding and retention of motoric representations were included. These required participants to produce repetitive sequences of either fine motor gestures (Experiment 1, N = 16) or more basic ones (Experiments 2, N = 16, and 3, N = 16). The benefit of action-based recall was reduced following the production of basic gestures but remained intact under all other interference conditions. These results suggest that the mnemonic advantage of enacted recall depends on a cognitive system dedicated to the temporary maintenance of motoric representations of planned action sequences.
来自双重任务研究的证据表明,工作记忆支持言语指令的保留和执行。现有工作记忆模型难以轻易解释的一个关键发现是,参与者在实际执行一系列指令时始终比口头重复指令更准确。这种动作优势在工作记忆的多成分模型中没有明显的来源,有人提出它是由一个尚未被发现的有限容量存储驱动的,该存储专门用于临时维持预期动作的空间、运动和时间特征。为了验证这一假设,我们试图通过同时进行运动抑制来选择性地消除动作优势。在三个双重任务实验中,通过基于动作的回忆和口头回忆来评估年轻人对口头指令序列的即时记忆。除了已知会加重语音回路和中央执行系统负担的经典干扰任务外,还包括旨在损害运动表征编码和保留的运动抑制任务。这些任务要求参与者产生精细运动手势(实验1,N = 16)或更基本手势(实验2,N = 16,实验3,N = 16)的重复序列。在产生基本手势后,基于动作的回忆的优势降低,但在所有其他干扰条件下保持不变。这些结果表明,执行性回忆的记忆优势取决于一个专门用于临时维持计划动作序列的运动表征的认知系统。