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Short article

Implicit motor sequence learning is not represented purely in response locations

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Pages 1516-1522 | Received 03 Dec 2007, Accepted 09 Dec 2008, Published online: 25 Jun 2009
 

Abstract

This study employed a novel variant of the serial reaction time task, focused on sequencing one element of movement—direction. During the task a repeated pattern of alternating directions (right–left–right, etc.) was embedded in the stimuli, and there was no series of response locations. Responses were made via two effector systems: single-finger responding (necessitates lateral arm movements between response keys), and four-fingered responding (4 individual fingers on 4 individual keys; requires no lateral arm movement). The sequence of directions was only learned by participants who performed lateral movements during training, indicating that learning was contingent on the particular motor effector used. Participants with low levels of sequence awareness displayed the same pattern of results.

Acknowledgments

This work is dedicated to the memory of Marc Vernon Richard. We thank Axel Buchner, Michael Ziessler, and an anonymous reviewer for insightful comments on an earlier version of this manuscript, and Lidong E, Department of Statistics, Colorado State University, for valuable assistance with the generation portion of this experiment. Ben Clegg's contribution was supported in part by Army Research Office Grant W9112NF–05–1–0153 (PI: Alice Healy). Carol Seger's contribution was supported in part by the National Institutes of Health, Grant R01MH079182.

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