Handedness dependency in recall from everyday memory.

A number of previous studies have demonstrated systematic misremembering of the direction in which the Queen's head faces on British coins. Two experiments were carried out to investigate whether this phenomenon is affected by a person's handedness. In both experiments, right-handed and le...

Szczegółowa specyfikacja

Opis bibliograficzny
Główni autorzy: Jones, G, Martin, M
Format: Journal article
Język:English
Wydane: 1997
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author Jones, G
Martin, M
author_facet Jones, G
Martin, M
author_sort Jones, G
collection OXFORD
description A number of previous studies have demonstrated systematic misremembering of the direction in which the Queen's head faces on British coins. Two experiments were carried out to investigate whether this phenomenon is affected by a person's handedness. In both experiments, right-handed and left-handed participants were found to differ significantly in their verbal responses, with recall performance significantly worse than chance for right-handed but not for left-handed participants. Experiment 2 also examined degrees of handedness, and found significant variation in recall across the handedness range. Performance in this everyday-memory paradigm appears to be determined by both handedness and schema factors. It is proposed that although in this task the response was verbal one, relevant motor imagery may nevertheless have been activated and led to the highly unusual observation of an effect of handedness upon cognitive performance.
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spelling oxford-uuid:3d36a920-ab86-4908-97bf-1e2bc37f66712022-03-26T14:18:05ZHandedness dependency in recall from everyday memory.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:3d36a920-ab86-4908-97bf-1e2bc37f6671EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford1997Jones, GMartin, MA number of previous studies have demonstrated systematic misremembering of the direction in which the Queen's head faces on British coins. Two experiments were carried out to investigate whether this phenomenon is affected by a person's handedness. In both experiments, right-handed and left-handed participants were found to differ significantly in their verbal responses, with recall performance significantly worse than chance for right-handed but not for left-handed participants. Experiment 2 also examined degrees of handedness, and found significant variation in recall across the handedness range. Performance in this everyday-memory paradigm appears to be determined by both handedness and schema factors. It is proposed that although in this task the response was verbal one, relevant motor imagery may nevertheless have been activated and led to the highly unusual observation of an effect of handedness upon cognitive performance.
spellingShingle Jones, G
Martin, M
Handedness dependency in recall from everyday memory.
title Handedness dependency in recall from everyday memory.
title_full Handedness dependency in recall from everyday memory.
title_fullStr Handedness dependency in recall from everyday memory.
title_full_unstemmed Handedness dependency in recall from everyday memory.
title_short Handedness dependency in recall from everyday memory.
title_sort handedness dependency in recall from everyday memory
work_keys_str_mv AT jonesg handednessdependencyinrecallfromeverydaymemory
AT martinm handednessdependencyinrecallfromeverydaymemory