Smith Maverick E, Kurby Christopher A, Bailey Heather R
Washington University in St. Louis.
Kansas State University.
Discourse Process. 2023;60(2):141-161. doi: 10.1080/0163853x.2023.2185408. Epub 2023 Mar 27.
We segment what we read into meaningful events, each separated by a discrete boundary. How does event segmentation during encoding relate to the structure of story information in long-term memory? To evaluate this question, participants read stories of fictional historical events and then engaged in a post-reading verb arrangement task. In this task, participants saw verbs from each of the events placed randomly on a computer screen, and then they arranged the verbs into groups onscreen based on their understanding of the story. Participants who successfully comprehended the story placed verbs from the same event closer to each other than verbs from different events, even after controlling for orthographic, text-based, semantic, and situational overlap between verbs. Thus, how people structure story information into separate events during online comprehension is associated with how that information is stored in memory. Specifically, story information within an event is bound together in memory more so than information between events.
我们将所读内容分割成有意义的事件,每个事件由一个离散的边界分隔开来。编码过程中的事件分割与长期记忆中故事信息的结构有怎样的关系呢?为了评估这个问题,参与者阅读虚构历史事件的故事,然后进行阅读后的动词排列任务。在这个任务中,参与者看到来自每个事件的动词被随机放置在电脑屏幕上,然后他们根据对故事的理解在屏幕上把动词分组。即使在控制了动词之间的拼写、文本、语义和情境重叠之后,成功理解故事的参与者将同一事件中的动词放置得比不同事件中的动词彼此更靠近。因此,人们在在线理解过程中将故事信息构建成单独事件的方式与该信息在记忆中的存储方式相关。具体而言,一个事件内的故事信息在记忆中比不同事件之间的信息联系更紧密。