2014
DOI: 10.1111/bjop.12069
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First‐time viewers' comprehension of films: Bridging shot transitions

Abstract: Which perceptual and cognitive prerequisites must be met in order to be able to comprehend a film is still unresolved and a controversial issue. In order to gain some insights into this issue, our field experiment investigates how first-time adult viewers extract and integrate meaningful information across film cuts. Three major types of commonalities between adjacent shots were differentiated, which may help first-time viewers with bridging the shots: pictorial, causal, and conceptual. Twenty first-time, 20 l… Show more

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Cited by 28 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…This awareness is at least partly due to experience with edited film. Ildirar and Schwan (; see also Schwan & Ildirar, ) found that adults who had no experience with edited film were sometimes able to comprehend sequences spontaneously when the sequences depicted familiar actions that unfolded across several shots. However, comprehension was limited: These novice viewers often misinterpreted sequences that depicted visually distinct (albeit semantically related) shots, such as those that depicted different areas of one larger space.…”
Section: Adults’ Comprehension Of Edited Videomentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This awareness is at least partly due to experience with edited film. Ildirar and Schwan (; see also Schwan & Ildirar, ) found that adults who had no experience with edited film were sometimes able to comprehend sequences spontaneously when the sequences depicted familiar actions that unfolded across several shots. However, comprehension was limited: These novice viewers often misinterpreted sequences that depicted visually distinct (albeit semantically related) shots, such as those that depicted different areas of one larger space.…”
Section: Adults’ Comprehension Of Edited Videomentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Accordingly, we might expect differences in E-Conjunction processing between manga readers, who likely store these schematic structures as part of their “visual language” fluency, and readers of American comics, for whom such structures are less entrenched. Some role for experience is suggested by findings that naïve film viewers from a remote Turkish village have deficits generating “spatial inferences” from films using sequences akin to E-Conjunction (Ildirar & Schwan, 2015; Schwan & Ildirar, 2010). While this effect of experience held for individuals lacking exposure to visual narratives, we would expect processing differences within experienced comic readers based on which comics they have read.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When asked to describe what they had seen, first-time viewers were only able to accurately describe edited sequences in which a familiar line of action bridged the cut. In a follow-up study (Ildirar & Schwan, 2015), the authors compared cuts combining shots with different types of relations, such as pictorial (e.g. the same person depicted from two viewpoints), causal (e.g.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%