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Journal Article

Citation

Parr-Brownlie L, Wickens J, Anson JG, Hyland B. Motor Control 1998; 2(2): 142-147.

Affiliation

Department of Physiology, and the Center for Neuroscience, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1998, Human Kinetics Publishers)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

9644285

Abstract

In the monkey, reaction time in a precued delayed response task was found to be faster when the animals had to remember the precue than when it was continually available (Smyrnis, Taira, Ashe, & Georgopoulos, 1992). We investigated whether this reflects a general principle that applies to all types of precued tasks. However, we found the opposite result in a simpler task in humans. Our findings suggest that the beneficial effect of a memory requirement on reaction time in the monkey may reflect an effect of task difficulty, rather than a fundamental process involved in all precued movement tasks.


Language: en

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