Informative auditory cues enhance motor sequence learning

Author Identifier

Li Ann Leow: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9655-3181

Document Type

Journal Article

Publication Title

European Journal of Neuroscience

Volume

61

Issue

10

Publisher

Wiley

School

School of Arts and Humanities

RAS ID

82179

Comments

Leow, L. A., Nguyen, A., Corti, E., & Marinovic, W. (2025). Informative auditory cues enhance motor sequence learning. European Journal of Neuroscience, 61(10), e70140. https://doi.org/10.1111/ejn.70140

Abstract

Motor sequence learning, or the ability to learn and remember sequences of actions, such as the sequence of actions required to tie one's shoelaces, is ubiquitous to everyday life. Contemporary research on motor sequence learning has been largely unimodal, ignoring the possibility that our nervous system might benefit from sensory inputs from multiple modalities. In this study, we investigated the properties of motor sequence learning in response to audiovisual stimuli. We found that sequence learning with auditory–visual stimuli showed a hallmark feature of traditional unimodal sequence learning tasks: sensitivity to stimulus timing, where lengthier interstimulus intervals of 500 ms improved sequence learning compared to briefer interstimulus intervals of 200 ms. Consistent with previous findings, we also found that auditory–visual stimuli improved learning compared to a unimodal visual-only condition. Furthermore, the informativeness of the auditory stimuli was important, as auditory stimuli which predicted the location of visual cues improved sequence learning compared to uninformative auditory stimuli which did not predict the location of the visual cues. Our findings suggest a potential utility of leveraging audiovisual stimuli in sequence learning interventions to enhance skill acquisition in education and rehabilitation contexts.

DOI

10.1111/ejn.70140

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Link to publisher version (DOI)

10.1111/ejn.70140