Zacks Jeffrey M, Swallow Khena M
Washington University in Saint Louis.
Curr Dir Psychol Sci. 2007 Apr;16(2):80-84. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-8721.2007.00480.x.
One way to understand something is to break it up into parts. New research indicates that segmenting ongoing activity into meaningful events is a core component of ongoing perception, with consequences for memory and learning. Behavioral and neuroimaging data suggest that event segmentation is automatic and that people spontaneously segment activity into hierarchically organized parts and sub-parts. This segmentation depends on the bottom-up processing of sensory features such as movement, and on the top-down processing of conceptual features such as actors' goals. How people segment activity affects what they remember later; as a result, those who identify appropriate event boundaries during perception tend to remember more and learn more proficiently.
理解某事物的一种方法是将其分解为各个部分。新的研究表明,将正在进行的活动分割成有意义的事件是持续感知的核心组成部分,会对记忆和学习产生影响。行为和神经成像数据表明,事件分割是自动进行的,人们会自发地将活动分割成层次分明的部分和子部分。这种分割取决于对诸如运动等感官特征的自下而上的处理,以及对诸如参与者目标等概念特征的自上而下的处理。人们分割活动的方式会影响他们之后的记忆;因此,那些在感知过程中识别出合适事件边界的人往往记得更多,学习也更高效。