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      Across the Event Horizon

      Current Directions in Psychological Science
      SAGE Publications

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          Most cited references20

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          Situation models in language comprehension and memory.

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            Environmental context-dependent memory: a review and meta-analysis.

            To address questions about human memory's dependence on the coincidental environmental contexts in which events occur, we review studies of incidental environmental context-dependent memory in humans and report a meta-analysis. Our theoretical approach to the issue stems from Glenberg's (1997) contention that introspective thought (e.g., remembering, conceptualizing) requires cognitive resources normally used to represent the immediate environment. We propose that if tasks encourage processing of noncontextual information (i.e., introspective thought) at input and/or at test, then both learning and memory will be less dependent on the ambient environmental contexts in which those activities occur. The meta-analysis showed that across all studies, environmental context effects were reliable, and furthermore, that the use of noncontextual cues during learning (overshadowing) and at test (outshining), as well as mental reinstatement of appropriate context cues at test, all reduce the effect of environmental manipulations. We conclude that environmental context-dependent memory effects are less likely to occur under conditions in which the immediate environment is likely to be suppressed.
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              Segmentation in the perception and memory of events.

              People make sense of continuous streams of observed behavior in part by segmenting them into events. Event segmentation seems to be an ongoing component of everyday perception. Events are segmented simultaneously at multiple timescales, and are grouped hierarchically. Activity in brain regions including the posterior temporal and parietal cortex and lateral frontal cortex increases transiently at event boundaries. The parsing of ongoing activity into events is related to the updating of working memory, to the contents of long-term memory, and to the learning of new procedures. Event segmentation might arise as a side effect of an adaptive mechanism that integrates information over the recent past to improve predictions about the near future.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Current Directions in Psychological Science
                Curr Dir Psychol Sci
                SAGE Publications
                0963-7214
                1467-8721
                July 25 2012
                July 25 2012
                : 21
                : 4
                : 269-272
                Article
                10.1177/0963721412451274
                e26a4df9-c1aa-4794-8d05-8979b2ffaf3a
                © 2012
                History

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