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RESEARCH ARTICLE

Offline Improvement during Motor Sequence Learning Is Not Restricted to Developing Motor Chunks

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Pages 317-324 | Received 20 Nov 2009, Accepted 20 Jul 2010, Published online: 08 Sep 2010
 

ABSTRACT

Robust offline performance gains, beyond those that would be anticipated by being exposed to additional physical practice, have been reported during procedural learning and have been attributed to enhancement consolidation, a process by which memory is transformed in such a way that it is not only more resistant to forgetting but may also involve a reorganization of information that supports superior task execution. The authors assessed the impact of increasing within-session practice extent on the emergence of offline performance gains. Practice-dependent improvements occurred across 12 and 24 30-s practice trials of a 5-element motor sequencing task. Offline improvements were observed following both 12 and 24 trials. The improvement following 12 trials was associated with the formation of motor chunks important for establishing movement sequence structure. In contrast, the offline improvement after 24 trials was not related to further changes in movement structure beyond those that had emerged during practice. These data suggest that additional memory operations, beyond those needed to amalgamate subsequences of the SRT task, are susceptible to enhancement consolidation.

Notes

1. There is considerable debate as to the nature of the distinction between explicit and implicit learning. Work addressing enhancement consolidation commonly makes this distinction based on the capacity of participants to free recall features of the procedural task being learned (for examples, see CitationRobertson et al., 2004).

2. A logarithmic regression is a frequent method used to estimate test performance in previous studies addressing consolidation and sequence learning (e.g., CitationWalker, Brakefield, Seidman, et al., 2003).

3. We recently presented data using analyses similar to those used by CitationRickard et al. (2008) that intimated that the offline enhancement was not a result of reactive inhibition (see CitationRhee, & Wright, 2009).

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