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叙事弥合了情节记忆中遥远事件之间的鸿沟。

Narratives bridge the divide between distant events in episodic memory.

机构信息

M.D./Ph.D. Program, University of California, Davis, Sacramento, CA, USA.

Neuroscience Graduate Group, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA, USA.

出版信息

Mem Cognit. 2022 Apr;50(3):478-494. doi: 10.3758/s13421-021-01178-x. Epub 2021 Apr 26.

Abstract

Many studies suggest that information about past experience, or episodic memory, is divided into discrete units called "events." Yet we can often remember experiences that span multiple events. Events that occur in close succession might simply be linked because of their proximity to one another, but we can also build links between events that occur farther apart in time. Intuitively, some kind of organizing principle should enable temporally distant events to become bridged in memory. We tested the hypothesis that episodic memory exhibits a narrative-level organization, enabling temporally distant events to be better remembered if they form a coherent narrative. Furthermore, we tested whether post-encoding memory consolidation is necessary to integrate temporally distant events. In three experiments, participants learned and subsequently recalled events from fictional stories, in which pairs of temporally distant events involving side characters ("sideplots") either formed one coherent narrative or two unrelated narratives. Across participants, we varied whether recall was assessed immediately after learning, or after a delay: 24 hours, 12 hours between morning and evening ("wake"), or 12 hours between evening and morning ("sleep"). Participants recalled more information about coherent than unrelated narrative events, in most delay conditions, including immediate recall and wake conditions, suggesting that post-encoding consolidation was not necessary to integrate temporally distant events into a larger narrative. Furthermore, post hoc modeling across experiments suggested that narrative coherence facilitated recall over and above any effects of sentence-level semantic similarity. This reliable memory benefit for coherent narrative events supports theoretical accounts which propose that narratives provide a high-level architecture for episodic memory.

摘要

许多研究表明,关于过去经验的信息,或情景记忆,被分为离散的单元,称为“事件”。然而,我们经常可以记住跨越多个事件的经验。连续发生的事件可能仅仅是因为它们彼此接近而联系在一起,但我们也可以在时间上相隔较远的事件之间建立联系。直观地说,某种组织原则应该使时间上遥远的事件在记忆中得以连接。我们检验了这样一种假设,即情景记忆表现出一种叙事层次的组织,使得时间上遥远的事件如果形成一个连贯的叙述,就更容易被记住。此外,我们还测试了记忆巩固是否是整合时间上遥远事件所必需的。在三个实验中,参与者学习并随后回忆虚构故事中的事件,其中涉及次要角色的两个时间上遥远的事件(“次要情节”)要么形成一个连贯的叙述,要么形成两个不相关的叙述。在参与者中,我们改变了回忆是在学习后立即评估还是在延迟后评估:24 小时、上午和晚上之间的 12 小时(“唤醒”)或晚上和早晨之间的 12 小时(“睡眠”)。在大多数延迟条件下,包括即时回忆和唤醒条件,参与者回忆起关于连贯叙事事件的信息比不相关的叙事事件更多,这表明记忆巩固在将时间上遥远的事件整合到一个更大的叙述中是不必要的。此外,跨实验的事后建模表明,叙事连贯性除了句子级语义相似性的任何影响之外,还促进了回忆。连贯叙事事件的这种可靠记忆优势支持了理论解释,即叙事为情景记忆提供了一个高级别的架构。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/d2c0/8938343/e9bff622ef8a/13421_2021_1178_Fig1_HTML.jpg

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