Manipulability impairs association-memory: Revisiting effects of incidental motor processing on verbal paired-associates |
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Authors: | Christopher R. Madan |
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Affiliation: | Psychology Department, Biological Sciences Building, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2E9, Canada |
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Abstract: | Imageability is known to enhance association-memory for verbal paired-associates. High-imageability words can be further subdivided by manipulability, the ease by which the named object can be functionally interacted with. Prior studies suggest that motor processing enhances item-memory, but impairs association-memory. However, these studies used action verbs and concrete nouns as the high- and low-manipulability words, respectively, confounding manipulability with word class. Recent findings demonstrated that nouns can serve as both high- and low-manipulability words (e.g., CAMERA and TABLE, respectively), allowing us to avoid this confound. Here participants studied pairs of words that consisted of all possible pairings of high- and low-manipulability words and were tested with immediate cued recall. Recall was worse for pairs that contained high-manipulability words. In free recall, participants recalled more high- than low-manipulability words. Our results provide further evidence that manipulability influences memory, likely occurring through automatic motor imagery. |
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Keywords: | 2300 2330 2340 2343 |
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