Mentally replaying past events (e.g., having breakfast, doing the laundry) generally takes less time than the actual event duration, a phenomenon known as the temporal compression of events (TCE) in episodic memory. In this study, we evaluated the extent to which rates of TCE depend on the structure and duration of events by manipulating both dimensions orthogonally. Thirty-seven participants were presented with movie clips of everyday activities that lasted 30 or 60 s and that included few or many event boundaries (EBs; moments within activities corresponding to the transitions between sub-events). For each movie, participants had to mentally replay the unfolding of the event they just watched in as much detail as possible. TCE was compute...
Timing is a ubiquitous feature of everyday experience. Although we live in a world in which time is ...
Many studies have provided evidence that the medial temporal lobes of the brain are involved in memo...
peer reviewedThe continuous flow of experience that characterizes real-life events is not recorded a...
peer reviewedMentally replaying past events (e.g., having breakfast, doing the laundry) generally ta...
peer reviewedRemembering everyday events typically takes less time than the actual duration of the r...
peer reviewedWhy does it take less time to remember an event than to experience it? Recent evidence ...
peer reviewedaudience: researcher, professional, studentWhile age differences in episodic memory are...
Perceivers spontaneously segment ongoing activity into discrete events. This segmentation is importa...
Recent evidence suggests that the dynamic flow of information that constitutes daily-life events i...
Our memories are temporally organized. However, little is known about how the duration of individual...
peer reviewedThe role of working memory processes in the temporal compression of episodic memorie
When remembering an event, not only do we recollect what happened, when and where it happened, but a...
peer reviewedThe role of working memory processes in the temporal compression of episodic memorie
Abstract To remember everyday activity it is important to encode it effectively, and ...
Although there has been over a century of research on memory and consolidation, there remains no con...
Timing is a ubiquitous feature of everyday experience. Although we live in a world in which time is ...
Many studies have provided evidence that the medial temporal lobes of the brain are involved in memo...
peer reviewedThe continuous flow of experience that characterizes real-life events is not recorded a...
peer reviewedMentally replaying past events (e.g., having breakfast, doing the laundry) generally ta...
peer reviewedRemembering everyday events typically takes less time than the actual duration of the r...
peer reviewedWhy does it take less time to remember an event than to experience it? Recent evidence ...
peer reviewedaudience: researcher, professional, studentWhile age differences in episodic memory are...
Perceivers spontaneously segment ongoing activity into discrete events. This segmentation is importa...
Recent evidence suggests that the dynamic flow of information that constitutes daily-life events i...
Our memories are temporally organized. However, little is known about how the duration of individual...
peer reviewedThe role of working memory processes in the temporal compression of episodic memorie
When remembering an event, not only do we recollect what happened, when and where it happened, but a...
peer reviewedThe role of working memory processes in the temporal compression of episodic memorie
Abstract To remember everyday activity it is important to encode it effectively, and ...
Although there has been over a century of research on memory and consolidation, there remains no con...
Timing is a ubiquitous feature of everyday experience. Although we live in a world in which time is ...
Many studies have provided evidence that the medial temporal lobes of the brain are involved in memo...
peer reviewedThe continuous flow of experience that characterizes real-life events is not recorded a...