International audienceImagine you see a video of someone pulling back their leg to kick a soccer ball, and then a soccer ball soaring toward a goal. You would likely infer that these scenes are two parts of the same event, and this inference would likely cause you to remember having seen the moment the person kicked the soccer ball, even if that information was never actually presented (Strickland & Keil, 2011, Cognition, 121[3], 409–415). What cues trigger people to "fill in" causal events from incomplete information? Is it due to the experience they have had with soccer balls being kicked toward goals? Is it the visual similarity of the object in both halves of the video? Or is it the mere spatiotemporal continuity of the event? In three ...
Although it has long been known that time is a cue to causation, recent work with adults has demonst...
Little is known about the mechanisms that underlie time perception. In the past, it has been assumed...
Our visual experience is surprisingly rich: We do not only see low-level properties such as colors o...
Abstract The comprehension of dynamic naturalistic events poses at least two challenges to the cogni...
Over the last few decades, Causal Model Theory (CMT) has become a dominant framework for human causa...
When remembering an event, not only do we recollect what happened, when and where it happened, but a...
An important aspect of event cognition is the segmentation of activity into events. However, much of...
In the physical world, cause and effect are inseparable: ambient conditions trigger humans to perfor...
Events are considered as temporal segments with a beginning and an endpoint. Philosophical and lingu...
Michotte can be considered as the pioneering researcher with respect to the phenomenon of causality ...
Memory for naturalistic events over short delays is important for visual scene processing, reading c...
Phenomenal causality is an illusion built on an incomplete perception. It is an illusion because we ...
In addition to perceiving the colors, shapes, and motions of objects, observers can perceive higher-...
Previous research on multimedia information filtering has mainly concentrated on key frame identific...
This work investigates how we organize complex, multiple and overlapping events. Two hypotheses have...
Although it has long been known that time is a cue to causation, recent work with adults has demonst...
Little is known about the mechanisms that underlie time perception. In the past, it has been assumed...
Our visual experience is surprisingly rich: We do not only see low-level properties such as colors o...
Abstract The comprehension of dynamic naturalistic events poses at least two challenges to the cogni...
Over the last few decades, Causal Model Theory (CMT) has become a dominant framework for human causa...
When remembering an event, not only do we recollect what happened, when and where it happened, but a...
An important aspect of event cognition is the segmentation of activity into events. However, much of...
In the physical world, cause and effect are inseparable: ambient conditions trigger humans to perfor...
Events are considered as temporal segments with a beginning and an endpoint. Philosophical and lingu...
Michotte can be considered as the pioneering researcher with respect to the phenomenon of causality ...
Memory for naturalistic events over short delays is important for visual scene processing, reading c...
Phenomenal causality is an illusion built on an incomplete perception. It is an illusion because we ...
In addition to perceiving the colors, shapes, and motions of objects, observers can perceive higher-...
Previous research on multimedia information filtering has mainly concentrated on key frame identific...
This work investigates how we organize complex, multiple and overlapping events. Two hypotheses have...
Although it has long been known that time is a cue to causation, recent work with adults has demonst...
Little is known about the mechanisms that underlie time perception. In the past, it has been assumed...
Our visual experience is surprisingly rich: We do not only see low-level properties such as colors o...