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Aging and the segmentation of narrative film
Authors:Christopher A. Kurby  Lillian K.E. Asiala  Steven R. Mills
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology, Grand Valley State University, Allendale, MI, USA;2. Department of Psychology, Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, IL, USA
Abstract:The perception of event structure in continuous activity is important for everyday comprehension. Although the segmentation of experience into events is a normal concomitant of perceptual processing, previous research has shown age differences in the ability to perceive structure in naturalistic activity, such as a movie of someone washing a car. However, past research has also shown that older adults have a preserved ability to comprehend events in narrative text, which suggests that narrative may improve the event processing of older adults. This study tested whether there are age differences in event segmentation at the intersection of continuous activity and narrative: narrative film. Younger and older adults watched and segmented a narrative film, The Red Balloon, into coarse and fine events. Changes in situational features, such as changes in characters, goals, and objects predicted segmentation. Analyses revealed little age-difference in segmentation behavior. This suggests the possibility that narrative structure supports event understanding for older adults.
Keywords:Event segmentation  Aging  Comprehension  Narrative  Event cognition  Film
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