Cross-Modal Facilitation of Episodic Memory by Sequential Action Execution.

IF 4.8 1区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Psychological Science Pub Date : 2023-05-01 Epub Date: 2023-04-07 DOI:10.1177/09567976231158292
Camille Gasser, Lila Davachi
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Abstract

Throughout our lives, the actions we produce are often highly familiar and repetitive (e.g., commuting to work). However, layered upon these routine actions are novel, episodic experiences. Substantial research has shown that prior knowledge can facilitate learning of conceptually related new information. But despite the central role our behavior plays in real-world experience, it remains unclear how engagement in a familiar sequence of actions influences memory for unrelated, nonmotor information coincident with those actions. To investigate this, we had healthy young adults encode novel items while simultaneously following a sequence of actions (key presses) that was either predictable and well-learned or random. Across three experiments (N = 80 each), we found that temporal order memory, but not item memory, was significantly enhanced for novel items encoded while participants executed predictable compared with random action sequences. These results suggest that engaging in familiar behaviors during novel learning scaffolds within-event temporal memory, an essential feature of episodic experiences.

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顺序动作执行对外显记忆的跨模态促进作用
在我们的一生中,我们的行为往往是非常熟悉和重复的(例如,上下班)。然而,在这些日常行为之上,还隐藏着新奇的、偶发的体验。大量研究表明,先前的知识可以促进对概念相关的新信息的学习。但是,尽管我们的行为在现实世界的经验中扮演着核心角色,人们仍然不清楚参与一连串熟悉的动作会如何影响对与这些动作无关的非运动信息的记忆。为了研究这个问题,我们让健康的年轻人在编码新项目时,同时按照可预测的、熟知的或随机的动作序列(按键)进行操作。通过三项实验(每项实验的人数为 80 人),我们发现,与随机动作序列相比,参与者在执行可预测动作序列时编码的新项目的时序记忆显著增强,但项目记忆却没有增强。这些结果表明,在学习新知识的过程中,参与熟悉的行为可以强化事件内的时序记忆,而时序记忆是外显经验的一个基本特征。
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来源期刊
Psychological Science
Psychological Science PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
13.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
156
期刊介绍: Psychological Science, the flagship journal of The Association for Psychological Science (previously the American Psychological Society), is a leading publication in the field with a citation ranking/impact factor among the top ten worldwide. It publishes authoritative articles covering various domains of psychological science, including brain and behavior, clinical science, cognition, learning and memory, social psychology, and developmental psychology. In addition to full-length articles, the journal features summaries of new research developments and discussions on psychological issues in government and public affairs. "Psychological Science" is published twelve times annually.
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