The enactment effect: A systematic review and meta-analysis of behavioral, neuroimaging, and patient studies.

IF 17.3 1区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY Psychological bulletin Pub Date : 2022-05-01 DOI:10.1037/bul0000360
Brady R T Roberts, Colin M MacLeod, Myra A Fernandes
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

The enactment effect is the phenomenon that physically performing an action represented by a word or phrase (e.g., clap, clap your hands) results in better memory than does simply reading it. We examined data from three different methodological approaches to provide a comprehensive review of the enactment effect across 145 behavioral, 7 neuroimaging, and 31 neurological patient studies. Boosts in memory performance following execution of a physical action were compared to those produced by reading words or phrases, by watching an experimenter perform actions, or by engaging in self-generated imagery. Across the behavioral studies, we employed random-effects meta-regression with robust variance estimation (RVE) to reveal an average enactment effect size of g = 1.23. Further meta-analyses revealed that variations in study design and comparison task reliably influence the size of the enactment effect, whereas four other experiment factors-test format, learning instruction type, retention interval, and the presence of objects during encoding-likely do not influence the effect. Neuroimaging studies demonstrated enactment-related activation to be prevalent in the motor cortex and inferior parietal lobule. Patient studies indicated that, regardless of whether impairments of memory (e.g., Alzheimer's) or of motor capability (e.g., Parkinson's) were present, patients were able to benefit from enactment. The findings of this systematic review and meta-analysis highlight two components accounting for the memory benefit from enactment: a primary mental contribution relating to planning the action and a secondary physical contribution of the action itself. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).

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制定效应:对行为、神经影像学和患者研究的系统回顾和荟萃分析。
动作效应是指在身体上做一个单词或短语所代表的动作(例如,拍手,拍手)比简单地阅读它能提高记忆力的现象。我们检查了来自三种不同方法的数据,对145项行为研究、7项神经影像学研究和31项神经学患者研究的颁布效应进行了全面回顾。在进行物理动作后,记忆力的提高与阅读单词或短语、观看实验者的动作或参与自我生成的想象所产生的记忆效果进行了比较。在行为研究中,我们采用随机效应元回归与稳健方差估计(RVE),发现平均制定效应大小g = 1.23。进一步的元分析显示,研究设计和比较任务的变化可靠地影响了制定效应的大小,而其他四个实验因素-测试格式,学习教学类型,保留时间间隔和编码过程中物体的存在-可能不影响效果。神经影像学研究表明,动作相关的激活在运动皮层和下顶叶中普遍存在。患者研究表明,无论是否存在记忆障碍(如阿尔茨海默氏症)或运动能力障碍(如帕金森症),患者都能够从立法中受益。这项系统回顾和荟萃分析的发现突出了两个因素,说明了制定行动对记忆的好处:与计划行动有关的主要精神贡献和行动本身的次要身体贡献。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA,版权所有)。
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来源期刊
Psychological bulletin
Psychological bulletin 医学-心理学
CiteScore
33.60
自引率
0.90%
发文量
21
期刊介绍: Psychological Bulletin publishes syntheses of research in scientific psychology. Research syntheses seek to summarize past research by drawing overall conclusions from many separate investigations that address related or identical hypotheses. A research synthesis typically presents the authors' assessments: -of the state of knowledge concerning the relations of interest; -of critical assessments of the strengths and weaknesses in past research; -of important issues that research has left unresolved, thereby directing future research so it can yield a maximum amount of new information.
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