| Literature DB >> 28203629 |
David A Gold1, Jeffrey M Zacks2, Shaney Flores2.
Abstract
To remember everyday activity it is important to encode it effectively, and one important component of everyday activity is that it consists of events. People who segment activity into events more adaptively have better subsequent memory for that activity, and event boundaries are remembered better than event middles. The current study asked whether intervening to improve segmentation by cuing effective event boundaries would enhance subsequent memory for events. We selected a set of movies that had previously been segmented by a large sample of observers and edited them to provide visual and auditory cues to encourage segmentation. For each movie, cues were placed either at event boundaries or event middles, or the movie was left unedited. To further support the encoding of our everyday event movies, we also included post-viewing summaries of the movies. We hypothesized that cuing at event boundaries would improve memory, and that this might reduce age differences in memory. For both younger and older adults, we found that cuing event boundaries improved memory-particularly for the boundaries that were cued. Cuing event middles also improved memory, though to a lesser degree; this suggests that imposing a segmental structure on activity may facilitate memory encoding, even when segmentation is not optimal. These results provide evidence that structural cuing can improve memory for everyday events in younger and older adults.Entities:
Keywords: Cognitive aging; Event cognition; Event horizon model; Event segmentation theory
Year: 2017 PMID: 28203629 PMCID: PMC5258781 DOI: 10.1186/s41235-016-0043-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cogn Res Princ Implic ISSN: 2365-7464
Fig. 1Representative stills drawn from the routine videos that show a single actor preparing breakfast with toast and eggs, arranging decorations for a party, and planting window boxes
Demographic information for experiment 1
| Younger adults (n = 58) | Older adults (n = 40) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | SD | Mean | SD | |
| Age | 20.64 | 1.84 | 71.88 | 3.96 |
| Years of education* | 14.40 | 1.21 | 15.85 | 2.38 |
| Antonym vocabulary* | .57 | .21 | .71 | .28 |
| Synonym vocabulary* | .64 | .21 | .76 | .25 |
*Significant difference between older adult and younger adult groups (p < .0125)
Fig. 2Experiment 1: recall accuracy (+/-SE) by condition and type of information
Fig. 3Experiment 1: recognition accuracy (+/-SE) by group and presentation condition
Demographic information for experiment 2
| Younger adults ( | Older adults ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | SD | Mean | SD | |
| Age | 19.85 | 1.88 | 74.23 | 5.59 |
| Years of education* | 13.78 | 1.56 | 15.81 | 1.95 |
| Antonym vocabulary* | 0.62 | 0.22 | 0.73 | 0.25 |
| Synonym vocabulary* | 0.62 | 0.20 | 0.75 | 0.25 |
*Significant difference between older adult and younger adult groups (p < .0125)
Fig. 4Experiment 2: recall accuracy (+/-SE) by condition and type of information
Fig. 5Experiment 2: recognition accuracy (+/-SE) by presentation condition and group