Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
919819 Acta Psychologica 2013 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

A substantial amount of literature has demonstrated individuals' tendency to code verbally a series of movements for subsequent recall. However, the mechanisms underlying movement encoding remain unclear. In this paper, I argue that sensorimotor expertise influences the involvement of motor processes to store movements in working memory. Experts in motor activities and individuals with limited motor expertise were compared in three experimental conditions assessing movement recall: (a) without suppression task, (b) with verbal suppression, and (c) with motor suppression. Athletes outperformed controls in movement recall, but the suppression tasks affected the two groups differently. Verbal suppression affected controls more than athletes, whereas the effect was reversed with motor suppression. Together, these findings suggest that controls and athletes favor different mechanisms to encode movements, either based on verbal or on motor processes, providing further evidence for a tight relationship between sensorimotor and cognitive processes.

► This paper explores how sensorimotor expertise influences working memory processing. ► Motor experts and novices were compared in a movement working memory task. ► The experiment included three conditions, with verbal, motor, or no interference. ► Non-experts processed movements verbally whereas experts relied on motor processes. ► The study illustrates the interrelationship between motor and cognitive processes.

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