Procedural dependence in action memory: Effects of verb form and individual vs group conditions |
| |
Authors: | TORE HELSTRUP BO MOLANDER |
| |
Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway;Department of Psychology, University of Umeå, Umeå, Sweden |
| |
Abstract: | Two experiments explored whether the magnitude of the enactment effect in action memory (i. e., higher recall with motor than with non-motor encoding) may depend upon the use of individual or group testing procedures. Nonmotor encoding instructions, requiring the subjects to listen to orally presented action items, were compared to instructions which also required enactment. With encoding treated as a within-subject factor, the observations failed to reveal any significant difference between individual and group testing. With encoding treated as a between-subject factor, the results showed an interaction between test and encoding conditions, such that an enactment effect was found only with group testing. Different support value for auditory cues in group and individual test situations was assumed to account for this difference. In a third experiment the indicative and imperative verb forms were compared. An interaction was observed, showing that in Norwegian, enacted verbs were remembered better when presented in the indicative than in the imperative. No corresponding difference was found under non-enactment conditions. For this finding, a social interaction interpretation was offered. |
| |
Keywords: | action memory procedural effects social factors |
|
|