Exploring specificity of speeded aiming movements: Examining different measures of transfer

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Abstract

Participants were trained and tested to move a mouse cursor from a start position to targets on a circular display in a perceptual-motor reversal condition, with horizontal, but not vertical, reversals. During training, some participants (experimental) moved to two targets either along a single diagonal axis (D1) or along both axes (D2). For D2, return movements from the targets were in the same direction as instructed movements to unpracticed targets. Others (control) trained on all targets. Testing always involved all targets. At test, movement times (to reach the target after leaving the start position) were shorter on trained than on untrained targets, especially for the D1 condition, documenting training specificity. However, movement times in the experimental conditions to new targets during testing were shorter than those in the control condition during training, documenting transfer of learning, with more transfer for D2 than for D1. Initiation times (to leave the start position after target onset) showed no transfer. The results provide evidence that specificity and transfer are not mutually exclusive and depend on the measure used to assess performance. © 2010 The Psychonomic Society, Inc.

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APA

Wohldmann, E. L., & Healy, A. F. (2010). Exploring specificity of speeded aiming movements: Examining different measures of transfer. Memory and Cognition, 38(3), 344–355. https://doi.org/10.3758/MC.38.3.344

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