Miles C, Hardman E
School of Psychology, University of Wales, College of Cardiff, UK.
Ergonomics. 1998 Jan;41(1):20-8. doi: 10.1080/001401398187297.
In a free recall experiment, participants learned lists of words in two physiological states: at rest and while exercising aerobically on a bicycle ergometer. Recall of the words was required in either the state consistent with learning or in the alternative state. Word lists learned during aerobic exercise were recalled best during aerobic exercise and vice versa. Greater changes in heart rate in the changed state conditions were associated with greater retrieval decrements. Recall levels for words both learned and recalled at exercise were equivalent to those for words both learned and recalled at rest. This finding rules out the possibility that exercise per se interfered with the original learning. The study is consistent with the view that state-dependent memory should be viewed as a particular form of cue-dependent memory.
在一项自由回忆实验中,参与者在两种生理状态下学习单词列表:休息时和在自行车测力计上进行有氧运动时。要求在与学习一致的状态或另一种状态下回忆单词。在有氧运动期间学习的单词列表在有氧运动期间回忆效果最佳,反之亦然。在状态改变条件下心率的更大变化与更大的检索减量相关。在运动时学习和回忆的单词的回忆水平与在休息时学习和回忆的单词的回忆水平相当。这一发现排除了运动本身干扰原始学习的可能性。该研究与以下观点一致,即状态依存记忆应被视为线索依存记忆的一种特殊形式。