Reconstructive nature of temporal memory for movie scenes
Remembering when events took place is a key component of episodic memory. Using a sensitive behavioral measure, the present study investigates whether spontaneous event segmentation and script-based prior knowledge affect memory for the time of movie scenes. In three experiments, different groups of...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Cognition 2021-03, Vol.208, p.104557-104557, Article 104557 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Remembering when events took place is a key component of episodic memory. Using a sensitive behavioral measure, the present study investigates whether spontaneous event segmentation and script-based prior knowledge affect memory for the time of movie scenes. In three experiments, different groups of participants were asked to indicate when short video clips extracted from a previously encoded movie occurred on a horizontal timeline that represented the video duration. When participants encoded the entire movie, they were more precise at judging the temporal occurrence of clips extracted from the beginning and the end of the film compared to its middle part, but also at judging clips that were closer to event boundaries. Removing the final part of the movie from the encoding session resulted in a systematic bias in memory for time. Specifically, participants increasingly underestimated the time of occurrence of the video clips as a function of their proximity to the missing part of the movie. An additional experiment indicated that such an underestimation effect generalizes to different audio-visual material and does not necessarily reflect poor temporal memory. By showing that memories are moved in time to make room for missing information, the present study demonstrates that narrative time can be adapted to fit a standard template regardless of what has been effectively encoded, in line with reconstructive theories of memory.
•Subjects indicated the time of occurrence of clips from a previously encoded movie.•Video clips taken from the beginning/end of the movie were judged more precisely.•Proximity to event boundaries influenced the precision of memory for time.•A cut-before-end procedure resulted in a systematic bias of temporal judgments.•Memory for time is driven by a high-order representation of the narrative template. |
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ISSN: | 0010-0277 1873-7838 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.cognition.2020.104557 |