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The representation of response effector and response location in episodic memory for newly acquired actions: Evidence from retrieval-induced forgetting

Irene Reppa Orcid Logo, E. Rhian Worth, W. James Greville, Jo Saunders, James Greville Orcid Logo

Acta Psychologica, Volume: 143, Issue: 2, Pages: 210 - 217

Swansea University Authors: Irene Reppa Orcid Logo, James Greville Orcid Logo

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Abstract

Information retrieval can cause forgetting for related but non-retrieved information. Such retrieval-inducedforgetting (RIF) has been previously found for semantically and episodically related information. The currentstudy used RIF to examine whether response effector and location are encoded explic...

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Published in: Acta Psychologica
ISSN: 0001-6918
Published: 2013
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URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa14643
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first_indexed 2013-07-23T12:12:34Z
last_indexed 2019-06-14T19:17:48Z
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spelling 2019-06-14T11:41:36.3625109 v2 14643 2013-04-23 The representation of response effector and response location in episodic memory for newly acquired actions: Evidence from retrieval-induced forgetting 7824f127c16603af4e08530245a62400 0000-0002-2853-2311 Irene Reppa Irene Reppa true false 2ac7dbe89200a6930aed02585481a01a 0000-0002-9532-6163 James Greville James Greville true false 2013-04-23 HPS Information retrieval can cause forgetting for related but non-retrieved information. Such retrieval-inducedforgetting (RIF) has been previously found for semantically and episodically related information. The currentstudy used RIF to examine whether response effector and location are encoded explicitly in action memory.Participants learned unique touchscreen responses to ten novel objects. Correct actions to each object involvedleft-hand or right-hand pushing of one of four possible object buttons. After learning, participantspracticed two of the ten object-specific sequences. Unpracticed actions could share hand only, button only,both hand and button, or neither hand nor button, with the practiced actions. Subsequent testing showed significantRIF (in retrieval accuracy and speed measures) for actions that shared hand only, button only, or bothhand and button with the practiced action. The results have implications for understanding the representationsmediating episodic action memory, and for the potential of RIF as a tool for elucidating feature-basedrepresentations in this and other domains. Journal Article Acta Psychologica 143 2 210 217 0001-6918 30 6 2013 2013-06-30 10.1016/j.actpsy.2013.03.007 COLLEGE NANME Psychology COLLEGE CODE HPS Swansea University 2019-06-14T11:41:36.3625109 2013-04-23T08:02:51.2411235 Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences School of Psychology Irene Reppa 0000-0002-2853-2311 1 E. Rhian Worth 2 W. James Greville 3 Jo Saunders 4 James Greville 0000-0002-9532-6163 5
title The representation of response effector and response location in episodic memory for newly acquired actions: Evidence from retrieval-induced forgetting
spellingShingle The representation of response effector and response location in episodic memory for newly acquired actions: Evidence from retrieval-induced forgetting
Irene Reppa
James Greville
title_short The representation of response effector and response location in episodic memory for newly acquired actions: Evidence from retrieval-induced forgetting
title_full The representation of response effector and response location in episodic memory for newly acquired actions: Evidence from retrieval-induced forgetting
title_fullStr The representation of response effector and response location in episodic memory for newly acquired actions: Evidence from retrieval-induced forgetting
title_full_unstemmed The representation of response effector and response location in episodic memory for newly acquired actions: Evidence from retrieval-induced forgetting
title_sort The representation of response effector and response location in episodic memory for newly acquired actions: Evidence from retrieval-induced forgetting
author_id_str_mv 7824f127c16603af4e08530245a62400
2ac7dbe89200a6930aed02585481a01a
author_id_fullname_str_mv 7824f127c16603af4e08530245a62400_***_Irene Reppa
2ac7dbe89200a6930aed02585481a01a_***_James Greville
author Irene Reppa
James Greville
author2 Irene Reppa
E. Rhian Worth
W. James Greville
Jo Saunders
James Greville
format Journal article
container_title Acta Psychologica
container_volume 143
container_issue 2
container_start_page 210
publishDate 2013
institution Swansea University
issn 0001-6918
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.actpsy.2013.03.007
college_str Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
hierarchytype
hierarchy_top_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
department_str School of Psychology{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Psychology
document_store_str 0
active_str 0
description Information retrieval can cause forgetting for related but non-retrieved information. Such retrieval-inducedforgetting (RIF) has been previously found for semantically and episodically related information. The currentstudy used RIF to examine whether response effector and location are encoded explicitly in action memory.Participants learned unique touchscreen responses to ten novel objects. Correct actions to each object involvedleft-hand or right-hand pushing of one of four possible object buttons. After learning, participantspracticed two of the ten object-specific sequences. Unpracticed actions could share hand only, button only,both hand and button, or neither hand nor button, with the practiced actions. Subsequent testing showed significantRIF (in retrieval accuracy and speed measures) for actions that shared hand only, button only, or bothhand and button with the practiced action. The results have implications for understanding the representationsmediating episodic action memory, and for the potential of RIF as a tool for elucidating feature-basedrepresentations in this and other domains.
published_date 2013-06-30T03:16:44Z
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score 11.017731