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Boundedness in event cognition: Viewers spontaneously represent the temporal texture of events

•We report that people spontaneously track boundedness during event perception.•Viewers better detected interruptions at event midpoints compared to endpoints.•But the endpoint-midpoint difference was greater in bounded than unbounded events.•Thus event cognition is sensitive to the internal tempora...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of memory and language 2022-12, Vol.127, p.104353, Article 104353
Main Authors: Ji, Yue, Papafragou, Anna
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:•We report that people spontaneously track boundedness during event perception.•Viewers better detected interruptions at event midpoints compared to endpoints.•But the endpoint-midpoint difference was greater in bounded than unbounded events.•Thus event cognition is sensitive to the internal temporal structure of events. A long philosophical and linguistic literature on events going back to Aristotle distinguishes between events that are internally structured in terms of distinct temporal stages leading to culmination (bounded events; e.g., a girl folded up a handkerchief) and events that are internally unstructured and lack an inherent endpoint (unbounded events; e.g., a girl waved a handkerchief). Here we show that event cognition spontaneously computes this foundational dimension of the temporal texture of events. People watched videos of either bounded or unbounded events that included a visual interruption lasting either 0.13 s (Experiment 1) or 0.03 s (Experiments 2 and 3). The interruption was placed at either the midpoint or close to the endpoint of the event stimulus. People had to indicate whether they saw an interruption after watching each video (Experiments 1 and 2) or respond as soon as they detected an interruption while watching each video (Experiment 3). When people responded after the video, they were more likely to ignore interruptions placed close to event endpoints compared to event midpoints (Experiment 1); similarly, when they responded during the video, they reacted more slowly to endpoint compared to midpoint interruptions (Experiment 3). Crucially, across the three experiments, there was an interaction between event type and interruption timing: the endpoint-midpoint difference depended on whether participants were watching an event that was bounded or unbounded. These results suggest that, as people perceive dynamic events, they spontaneously track boundedness, or the temporal texture of events. This finding has implications for current models of event cognition and the language-cognition interface.
ISSN:0749-596X
DOI:10.1016/j.jml.2022.104353