Content area

Abstract

The effect on reaction time (RT) and movement time (MT) of remembering which one of several targets to move to was investigated in 18 participants who completed 416 trials in each task. On each trial, participants moved their index finger from a central, illuminated switch (the stimulus) to one of eight targets located on the circumference of a 6 cm radius circle. A visual cue (illumination of the target) informed the participant of the appropriate target. In the memorised delay task, the cued target was lit for 300 ms followed by a variable (450-750 ms) foreperiod during which the participant was required to remember the location of the target until the stimulus light was extinguished. In the non-memorised delay task, the target remained lit during the entire foreperiod (750-1050 ms) until the response was completed. At the "go" signal (stimulus light extinguished) participants moved as quickly and accurately as possible to the cued target. Both RT and MT were significantly (p<0.05) longer in the memorised delay task. The increase in RT shows that remembering which target imposed a greater load on motor preparation even though all the information needed for preparing the response was presented in the cue at the beginning of each trial. The increase in MT raises the possibility that movement execution was also programmed during motor preparation.

Details

Title
Motor preparation in a memorised delay task
Author
Jordan, Kimberlee; Hyland, Brian I; Wickens, Jeffery R; Anson, J Greg
Pages
102-8
Publication year
2005
Publication date
Sep 2005
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
00144819
e-ISSN
14321106
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
215121594
Copyright
Springer-Verlag 2005