Abstract

Event boundaries are important moments throughout an ongoing activity that influence perception and memory. They allow people to parse continuous activities into meaningful events, encode the temporal sequence of events and bind event information together in episodic memory (DuBrow & Davachi, 2013). Thus, drawing attention to event boundaries may facilitate these important perceptual and encoding processes. In the current study, we used emotionally arousing stimuli to guide attention to event boundaries because this type of stimulus has been shown to influence perception and attention. We evaluated whether accentuating event boundaries with commercials improves memory and whether emotional stimuli further enhance this effect. A total of 97 participants watched a television episode in which we manipulated commercial break locations (boundary, non-boundary, no commercial) and the type of commercial (emotional, neutral) and then completed memory tasks. Overall, placing emotionally arousing commercials at event boundaries increased memory for the temporal order of events, but no other effects of accentuating event boundaries were observed. Thus, drawing attention to event boundaries—via emotionally charged commercials—increases the likelihood that people will perceive the change in events, update their mental model accordingly and better integrate temporal information from the just-encoded event.

Highlights

  • At any given moment our perceptual system deals with an overwhelming amount of sensory input and yet we are able to readily experience and act upon our environment

  • Event boundary perception is important for encoding the temporal sequence of an activity into episodic memory

  • Does emotional processing affect perception of event structure and later memory for a dynamic activity?. We evaluated this question through the use of commercials that varied in emotional intensity and their effects on memory for a television episode

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Summary

Introduction

At any given moment our perceptual system deals with an overwhelming amount of sensory input and yet we are able to readily experience and act upon our environment. Event boundary perception is important for encoding the temporal sequence of an activity into episodic memory To evaluate this relationship, Davachi and colleagues have evaluated the effect of event boundaries on temporal memory for text (Ezzyat & Davachi, 2011) and images (DuBrow & Davachi, 2013, 2014). Gold et al (2017) edited films to include visual and auditory cues such as the movie slowing down, arrows pointing to important objects, and a bell ringing at event boundaries or nonboundaries They found that cueing event boundaries improved memory, memory for the cued information, which is consistent with prior work (Boltz, 1992; Schwan et al, 2000). Inconsistent with Boltz’s findings, Gold et al (2017) found that cueing non-boundaries improved memory but to a lesser degree than cueing boundaries

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