The research identifies if handwriting captures attention for significant periods, resulting in a decline in working memory performance. Additionally, the experiments isolate whether the movements produced during handwriting contribute to that interference. To do this, verbal serial recall was compared between three different tasks − a listening task; a listening + handwriting task (i.e., motor and verbal demands); and a listening + handwriting-like drawing task (i.e., motor demands), in two experiments. Results showed that verbal serial recall was worse in the handwriting and drawing conditions compared to the listening condition. The handwriting and drawing conditions did not differ. In a third experiment, handwriting fluency was compared between a recall and no-recall task. This showed that handwriting fluency remains stable despite the addition of a verbal working memory task. In conclusion, the handwriting movements capture attention for significant periods, with little deterioration in recall due to the verbal component of handwriting.
Journal article
Investigating the lower level demands of writing: handwriting movements interfere with immediate verbal serial recall
Journal of Cognitive Psychology, Vol.28(4), pp.443-461
2016
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Abstract
Details
- Title
- Investigating the lower level demands of writing: handwriting movements interfere with immediate verbal serial recall
- Creators
- Richard Tindle (Author) - Southern Cross UniversityMitchell G Longstaff (Author) - Southern Cross University
- Publication Details
- Journal of Cognitive Psychology, Vol.28(4), pp.443-461
- Identifiers
- 3018; 991012821969902368
- Academic Unit
- School of Health and Human Sciences; Human Sciences; Faculty of Health
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Local Fields
- Original Research - SoLT