Individual differences in neural event segmentation of continuous experiences.

Cereb Cortex

Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH 03748, USA.

Published: June 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Event segmentation is a natural perceptual process essential for organizing continuous information and forming memories.
  • Although there are common patterns in how people segment events neurologically and behaviorally, individual differences exist, especially in areas where information is processed more slowly.
  • This variability in neural boundary locations correlates with how people remember and evaluate movies, indicating that the way we segment events influences our interpretations and memories of experiences.

Article Abstract

Event segmentation is a spontaneous part of perception, important for processing continuous information and organizing it into memory. Although neural and behavioral event segmentation show a degree of inter-subject consistency, meaningful individual variability exists atop these shared patterns. Here we characterized individual differences in the location of neural event boundaries across four short movies that evoked variable interpretations. Event boundary alignment across subjects followed a posterior-to-anterior gradient that was tightly correlated with the rate of segmentation: slower-segmenting regions that integrate information over longer time periods showed more individual variability in boundary locations. This relationship held irrespective of the stimulus, but the degree to which boundaries in particular regions were shared versus idiosyncratic depended on certain aspects of movie content. Furthermore, this variability was behaviorally significant in that similarity of neural boundary locations during movie-watching predicted similarity in how the movie was ultimately remembered and appraised. In particular, we identified a subset of regions in which neural boundary locations are both aligned with behavioral boundaries during encoding and predictive of stimulus interpretation, suggesting that event segmentation may be a mechanism by which narratives generate variable memories and appraisals of stimuli.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10321113PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhad106DOI Listing

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