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Events in the stream of behavior.

Maverick E Smith1,2, Jeffrey M Zacks1, Zachariah M Reagh1

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This summary is machine-generated.

The human mind builds and refines event models during comprehension. These structured models aid prediction, memory, and action control, with updating mechanisms impacting immediate processing and long-term memory formation.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Psychology

Background:

  • The human mind constructs dynamic internal representations of events during comprehension.
  • These event models are complex, multi-faceted, and operate across various timescales.
  • Event models are crucial for cognitive functions like prediction, memory encoding, and action regulation.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To explore the mechanisms by which the human mind constructs and updates event models.
  • To investigate the neural underpinnings and signatures of event model representations and their boundaries.
  • To understand the role of event model updating in immediate information processing and long-term memory.

Main Methods:

  • Review of existing literature on event comprehension and neural modeling.
  • Analysis of neuroimaging data identifying brain regions and activity patterns associated with event boundaries.
  • Examination of theoretical frameworks for event model updating, including prediction monitoring.

Main Results:

  • Event models are multidimensional, multi-timescale, and structured, supporting prediction, memory, and action control.
  • Updating occurs incrementally or globally, involving mechanisms like prediction quality monitoring.
  • Neural signatures include activity changes at event boundaries, with the default mode network playing a key role.

Conclusions:

  • Event model updating is fundamental to comprehension, influencing both real-time processing and the consolidation of long-term memories.
  • The brain utilizes a temporally graded architecture, with regions like the medial prefrontal cortex integrating information across different timescales.
  • Understanding event model dynamics offers insights into memory formation and cognitive control.