Sentence memory recall in adolescents: Effects of motor enactment, keyboarding, and handwriting during encoding

Author:

Söderlund Göran B. W.12ORCID,Torvanger Silje3,Hadjikhani Nouchine45,Johnels Jakob Åsberg46

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Teacher Education Arts and Sports Western Norway University of Applied Sciences Sogndal Norway

2. Department of Education and Special Education University of Gothenburg Gothenburg Sweden

3. Trudvang Skule Sogndal Norway

4. Gillberg Neuropsychiatry Centre University of Gothenburg, Sahlgrenska Academy Göteborg Sweden

5. Harvard Medical School Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging Massachusetts General Hospital Boston Boston Massachusetts USA

6. Institute of Neuroscience and Physiology Speech and language pathology Unit & the Gillberg Neuropsychiatry Centre, University of Gothenburg Gothenburg Sweden

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundPrior research has shown that memory for action sentences is stronger when stimuli are enacted during encoding than simply listened to: the so‐called enactment effect. The goal of the present study was to explore how writing during encoding—through handwriting and through keyboarding—fares compared with enacting, in supporting memory recall.MethodsOne hundred Norwegian high school students (64 girls, 36 boys) aged 16–21 years (M = 17.1) participated in the study. Four lists of verb–noun sentences with 12 sentences in each list were presented in four encoding conditions: (i) motor enactment, (ii) verbal listening, (iii) handwriting, and (iv) keyboarding.ResultsResults revealed a significant main effect of encoding condition, with the best memory gained in the enactment condition. Regarding writing, results showed that handwriting and keyboarding during encoding produced the lowest recall in comparison with the enactment and verbal listening conditions.ConclusionThese results thus provide additional support for the enactment effect. While there has been much discussion on the relative benefits of handwriting versus keyboarding on student performance, both seemed to be equally poor strategies for the particular learning task explored here, potentially through increased cognitive load.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience

Reference36 articles.

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4. Developmental differences in episodic memory across school ages: evidence from enacted events performed by self and others

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