Abstract

Motor memory is the process by which humans can adopt both persistent and flexible motor behaviours. Persistence and flexibility can be assessed through the examination of the cooperation/competition between new and old motor routines in the motor memory repertoire. Two paradigms seem to be particularly relevant to examine this competition/cooperation. First, a manual search task for hidden objects, namely the C-not-B task, which allows examining how a motor routine may influence the selection of action in toddlers. The second paradigm is procedural learning, and more precisely the consolidation stage, which allows assessing how a previously learnt motor routine becomes resistant to subsequent programming or learning of a new – competitive – motor routine. The present article defends the idea that results of both paradigms give precious information to understand the evolution of motor routines in healthy children. Moreover, these findings echo some clinical observations in developmental neuropsychology, particularly in children with Developmental Coordination Disorder. Such studies suggest that the level of equilibrium between persistence and flexibility of motor routines is an index of the maturity of the motor system.

Highlights

  • To cite this version: Jessica Tallet, Jean-Michel Albaret, James Rivière

  • The link between motor memory, action selection, and programming can be illustrated as follows: during motor learning, assessed by a procedural learning task, a new motor routine is built on the basis of motor routines pre-existing in the motor repertoire

  • We will describe studies on the C-not-B task and procedural learning in typical and atypical development to better understand how motor memory is involved in action selection and programming during childhood

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Summary

Introduction

To cite this version: Jessica Tallet, Jean-Michel Albaret, James Rivière. The role of motor memory in action selection and procedural learning: insights from children with typical and atypical development. Persistence and flexibility can be assessed through the examination of the cooperation/competition between new and old motor routines in the motor memory repertoire. Human motor memory is required to plan, anticipate, select, adapt, learn, recall, and forget motor behaviours, thanks to a dynamical process by which old/ pre-existing and new motor routines interact permanently.

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