| Literature DB >> 11369948 |
J M Zacks1, T S Braver, M A Sheridan, D I Donaldson, A Z Snyder, J M Ollinger, R L Buckner, M E Raichle.
Abstract
Temporal structure has a major role in human understanding of everyday events. Observers are able to segment ongoing activity into temporal parts and sub-parts that are reliable, meaningful and correlated with ecologically relevant features of the action. Here we present evidence that a network of brain regions is tuned to perceptually salient event boundaries, both during intentional event segmentation and during naive passive viewing of events. Activity within this network may provide a basis for parsing the temporally evolving environment into meaningful units.Entities:
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Year: 2001 PMID: 11369948 DOI: 10.1038/88486
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Neurosci ISSN: 1097-6256 Impact factor: 24.884