2015
DOI: 10.3758/s13423-015-0961-x
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Event boundaries and anaphoric reference

Abstract: The current study explored the finding that parsing a narrative into separate events impairs anaphor resolution. According to the Event Horizon Model, when a narrative event boundary is encountered, a new event model is created. Information associated with the prior event model is removed from working memory. So long as the event model containing the anaphor referent is currently being processed, this information should still be available when there is no narrative event boundary, even if reading has been disr… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…As another example, people also find it harder to resolve anaphors if the referent is in a prior event model as compared to the current one [56]. Recent work [57] has found that anaphor resolution is guided by the structure of the described events, and is only minimally influenced by extra-narrative event boundaries (such as pauses in reading).…”
Section: The Primacy Of the Current Event Model In Working Memorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As another example, people also find it harder to resolve anaphors if the referent is in a prior event model as compared to the current one [56]. Recent work [57] has found that anaphor resolution is guided by the structure of the described events, and is only minimally influenced by extra-narrative event boundaries (such as pauses in reading).…”
Section: The Primacy Of the Current Event Model In Working Memorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a result, any information that is part of the current event, even if it carried over from the prior event, is more available in working memory. However, information that is part of the prior event model becomes less available (e.g., Thompson & Radvansky, 2016; Zwaan, 1996). This is important because a failure to identify event boundaries properly could lead to a person inappropriately retaining information that is no longer appropriate, or failing to include new, appropriate information for the new event.…”
Section: Other Consequences Of Segmentationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This suggests that people may not necessarily construct event models based on spatial location unless it is made salient or functionally important to the task [ 74 ]. In addition, the spatial context change occurred outside the narrative environment (as opposed to within the narrative; e.g., a character changing locations) and it may be that in order for participants to perceive the boundary as relevant to the narrative there needed to be both narrative and extra-narrative spatial shifts [see 79 , for a similar argument].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%