Multisensory action effects facilitate the performance of motor sequences

Mengkai Luan, Heiko Maurer, Arash Mirifar, Jürgen Beckmann, Felix Ehrlenspiel

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

Research has shown that contingent, distinct action effects have a beneficial influence on motor sequence performance. Previous studies showed the beneficial influence of task-irrelevant action effects from one modality (auditory) on motor sequence performance, compared with no task-irrelevant action effects. The present study investigated the influence of task-irrelevant action effects on motor sequence performance from a multiple-modality perspective. We compared motor sequence performances of participants who received different task-irrelevant action effects in an auditory, visual, or audiovisual condition. In the auditory condition, key presses produced tones of a C-major scale that mapped to keys from left to right in ascending order. In the visual condition, key presses produced rectangles in different locations on the screen that mapped to keys from left to right in ascending order. In the audiovisual condition, both tone and rectangle effects were produced simultaneously by key presses. There were advantages for the audiovisual group in motor sequence initiation and execution. The results implied that, compared with unimodal action effects, action effects from multiple sensory modalities can prime an action faster and strengthen associations between successive actions, leading to faster motor sequence performance.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)475-483
Number of pages9
JournalAttention, Perception, and Psychophysics
Volume83
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2021

Keywords

  • Action effect
  • Motor sequence
  • Multisensory
  • The ideomotor principle

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