Department of Psychology, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY 11794-2500, USA.
Mem Cognit. 2010 Sep;38(6):753-61. doi: 10.3758/MC.38.6.753.
When people read narratives, they have ample opportunities to encode mental preferences about characters' decisions. In our present project, we examined how readers' preferences for characters' decisions structure their experiences of story outcomes. In Experiment 1, participants read brief stories and explicitly rated which of two potential decisions they thought the characters should make. The actual decision that each character made was either preferred or nonpreferred by readers. By the end of each story, readers learned whether there was a positive or negative outcome to these decisions. Decisions and outcomes either matched (e.g., a preferred decision followed by a positive outcome) or did not match (e.g., a nonpreferred decision followed by a negative outcome). Participants took longer to read outcome sentences when there was a mismatch. In Experiment 2, we replicated this finding with a task that allowed more natural reading. These results provide converging evidence that readers encode responses to characters' decisions and that these responses affect the time course with which they assimilate story outcomes.
当人们阅读叙事时,他们有很多机会对角色的决策进行心理偏好编码。在我们目前的项目中,我们研究了读者对角色决策的偏好如何构建他们对故事结果的体验。在实验 1 中,参与者阅读简短的故事,并明确评价他们认为角色应该做出的两个潜在决策中的哪一个。每个角色做出的实际决策要么是读者喜欢的,要么是不喜欢的。在每个故事结束时,读者了解这些决策的结果是积极的还是消极的。决策和结果要么匹配(例如,一个喜欢的决策后跟着一个积极的结果),要么不匹配(例如,一个不喜欢的决策后跟着一个消极的结果)。当不匹配时,参与者阅读结果句子的时间更长。在实验 2 中,我们使用一项允许更自然阅读的任务复制了这一发现。这些结果提供了一致的证据,表明读者对角色决策进行了编码,并且这些反应影响了他们同化故事结果的时间进程。