Title of article
When affordances climb into your mind: Advantages of motor simulation in a memory task performed by novice and expert rock climbers
Author/Authors
Alejandro A. Pezzulo، نويسنده , , Giovanni and Barca، نويسنده , , Laura and Bocconi، نويسنده , , Alessandro Lamberti and Borghi، نويسنده , , Anna M.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages
6
From page
68
To page
73
Abstract
Does the sight of multiple climbing holds laid along a path activate a motor simulation of climbing that path? One way of testing whether multiple affordances and their displacement influence the formation of a motor simulation is to study acquired motor skills. We used a behavioral task in which expert and novice rock climbers were shown three routes: an easy route, a route impossible to climb but perceptually salient, and a difficult route. After a distraction task, they were then given a recall test in which they had to write down the sequence of holds composing each route. We found no difference between experts and novices on the easy and impossible routes, whereas on the difficult route, the performance of experts was better than that of novices. This suggests that seeing a climbing wall activates a motor, embodied simulation, which relies not on perceptual salience, but on motor competence. More importantly, our results show that the capability to form this simulation is modulated by individuals’ motor repertoire and expertise, and that this strongly impacts recall.
Keywords
Grounded cognition , Motor chunks , Mirror neurons , Memory for actions , Motor memory , Affordance , SIMULATION , Embodied Cognition , Canonical neurons
Journal title
Brain and Cognition
Serial Year
2010
Journal title
Brain and Cognition
Record number
2250192
Link To Document