Monday 7 May 2007

Event Structure Perception


Thinking Thing by Thinkingthing


In order to comprehend the continuous stream of cacophonies and visual stimulation that battle for our attention, humans will breakdown activities into smaller, more digestible chunks, a phenomenon that psychologists describe as "event structure perception."

Event structure perception was originally believed to be confined to our visual system, but new research shows that a similar process occurs when reading about everyday events as well.

Nicole Speer and her colleagues at Washington University examined event structure perception by having subjects read narratives about everyday activities while undergoing functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) to measure neural activity. The subjects were then invited back a few days later to reread these same narratives, this time without the fMRI scan. Instead, they were asked to divide the narrative where they believed one segment of narrative activity ended and another segment began.

Speer, surmised that if changes in neural activity occurred at the same points that the subjects divided the stories, then it could be safe to suggest that humans are physiologically disposed to break down activities into narratives (remember that the same subjects had no idea during the first part of the experiment that they would later be asked to segment the story).

As expected, activity in certain areas of the brain increased at the points that subjects had identified as the beginning or end of a segment, otherwise known as an "event boundary." Consistent with previous research, such boundaries tended to occur during transitions in the narrative such as changes of location or a shift in the character's goals. Researchers have hypothesized that readers break down narrated activities into smaller chunks when they are reading stories. However, this is the first study to demonstrate that this process occurs naturally during reading, and to identify some of the brain regions that are involved in this process.

The fact that these results occurred with narratives that described mundane events is particularly important to our understanding of how humans comprehend everyday activity. Speer writes that the findings "provide evidence not only that readers are able to identify the structure of narrated activities, but also that this process of segmenting continuous text into discrete events occurs during normal reading."

In addition, a subset of the network of brain regions that also responds to event boundaries while subjects view movies of everyday events was activated. Speer believes that "this similarity between processing of visual and narrated activities may be more than mere coincidence, and may reflect the existence of a general network for understanding event structure." Future research will ultimately address the relationship between the two perception systems, and whether a global mechanism underlies event structure perception.

Article: "Human Brain Activity Time-Locked to Narrative Event Boundaries " May issue of Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.
Association for Psychological Science aps
Human Brain Breaks Down Events Into Smaller Units From Science Daily
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19 comments:

Mary said...

I definitely must use this system. Too much at once. Must have little bits at a time.

QUASAR9 said...

lol Mary, every Mosaic
is literally put together a piece at a time, to reveal the Big Picture

Life is a sequence of 'moments' which we experience and remember, or sometimes just forget.

Unknown said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Unknown said...

The funny thing is that the stuff we want to remember is what we forget first and what we want to forget sticks with us for quite some time.

By the way I am not as morbid a person as I appear in my blog - I think thats the concentrate of my sombre side - its like venom management I spit it all out in my blog ;)




Aside: Is there no way one can edit spelling mistakes in comments without deleting and re-writing?

QUASAR9 said...

lol Random Magus,
indeed as if from nowhere we get a burst of inspiration, sometimes the words fly by so fast we can never vocalise them or put pen to paper.

On Haloscan comments (Quasar9 blog) one can edit errors, but not when leaving comments on other sites.
Alas, typos are the order of the day (for all of us) on blogger comments.

Electro-Kevin said...

Often we conceptualise without words.

'Thinking Thing by Thinkingthing'

This caused a mini paradigm shift in me.

What effect would the fMRI equipment being ON or OFF had ?

Edilberto González Trejos - Autor said...

Great article!
Best reading today.
Cheers from Panama

Katie McKenna said...

lots of beautiful moments :)

serenity said...

Always interesting to learn of the vastness of the universe that exists inside our own head, things we have no idea we are doing.

Have a great weekend Q.

QUASAR9 said...

Hi Serenity, Thanks!
Wishing you a great weekend too.

QUASAR9 said...

lol, electro kelvin. The paradigm
The observed being affected by the observer (fMRI), and the observer (human) interfacing with the observed

QUASAR9 said...

Hi Songo, Welcome!
Nice of you to stop by and look in

QUASAR9 said...

Hi Katie, Magical Moments!
Smiles & best wishes flowing your way.

Alicia M B Ballard StudioGaleria said...

Q dear

only in small portions for me - no muti-tasking either... not anymore

dusties flowing to you
have agreat weekend

Alicia M B Ballard StudioGaleria said...

check out WordRapture.... :)

mystic rose said...

fascinating.

WHAT a super super computer. and we do all this unconsciously. and I realise hwo muchof a miracle, not just life, but the way it evolved to support this happening, of us being human beings.

Anonymous said...

Pretty interesting stuff ... now I just have to break it down into little Tango Steps. lol!
Then I'll come teach you how. ok?

QUASAR9 said...

lol Abigail, ok!
Works for me, name the time & place
or is it Time & Space

Annelisa said...

My first thought was 'stories are broken down into chapters into paragraphs into sentences into words into letters'... everything broken down, then built up as we take it all in... a magnificent process!