Publication | Open Access
Patterns of Interference in Sequence Learning and Prism Adaptation Inconsistent With the Consolidation Hypothesis
135
Citations
42
References
2002
Year
Motor LearningNeuropsychologyMotor SkillConsolidation HypothesisNeurolinguisticsSequential LearningPsycholinguisticsCognitionMotor ControlAttentionExplicit MemorySocial SciencesKinesiologyMemoryWorking MemoryCognitive NeuroscienceHealth SciencesCognitive ScienceMotor SkillsVisuomotor LearningRehabilitationPrism Adaptation InconsistentSequence LearningProcedural MemoryInterference ParadigmImplicit Motor Skills
The studies reported here used an interference paradigm to determine whether a long-term consolidation process (i.e., one lasting from several hours to days) occurs in the learning of two implicit motor skills, learning of a movement sequence and learning of a visuo-motor mapping. Subjects learned one skill and were tested on that skill 48 h later. Between the learning session and test session, some subjects trained on a second skill. The amount of time between the learning of the two skills varied for different subjects. In both the learning of a movement sequence and the learning of a visuo-motor mapping, we found that remote memories were susceptible to interference, but the passage of time did not afford protection from interference. These results are inconsistent with the long-term consolidation of these motor skills. A possible difference between these tasks and those that do show long-term consolidation is that the present tasks are not dynamic motor skills.
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