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Original Articles

Recall. And Recognition Processes in Motor Memory

Effects of Feedback and Knowledge of Results Delay

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Pages 23-34 | Received 24 Feb 1978, Published online: 13 Aug 2013
 

Abstract

In linear movement tasks of 200 msec (Experiment 1 — ballistic movement) and 500 msec (Experiment 2 — nonballistic movement), motor recall strength was assessed by absolute, constant, and variable error; recognition strength was assessed by Z’-transformed actual-estimate correlations and absolute actual-estimate difference scores. Contrary to predictions, neither increased KR delay (45 vs. 5 sec) nor limited visual-auditory-tactile feedback caused decrements in recognition processes over KR-training or KR-withdrawal trial blocks for the 200-msec task. In the 500-msec task, the independent variables impaired recognition through training and transfer trials but impaired recall only in the training trials. Results generally did not support the hypothesized independence between recall and recognition processes. Several methodological issues related to recall and recognition research were discussed.

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