2022
DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2021.104992
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Switching task sets creates event boundaries in memory

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Cited by 35 publications
(63 citation statements)
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References 48 publications
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“…In Experiment 2, we created a hierarchical design where changes in task rules occurred within the same stimulus categories (e.g., performing two different object classification tasks), echoing previous experiments (e.g., Heusser et al, 2018; Clewett et al, 2021, Wang & Egner, 2022), or were accompanied by changes in task stimulus categories (e.g., moving from an object to a scene classification task), following Experiment 1. We found that temporal order memory for stimuli from adjacent events of different stimulus categories was better than that for stimuli within the same event, replicating Experiment 1.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In Experiment 2, we created a hierarchical design where changes in task rules occurred within the same stimulus categories (e.g., performing two different object classification tasks), echoing previous experiments (e.g., Heusser et al, 2018; Clewett et al, 2021, Wang & Egner, 2022), or were accompanied by changes in task stimulus categories (e.g., moving from an object to a scene classification task), following Experiment 1. We found that temporal order memory for stimuli from adjacent events of different stimulus categories was better than that for stimuli within the same event, replicating Experiment 1.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Context was operationalized as a common task feature that remained the same throughout several consecutive trials of each run (Howard & Kahana, 2002;Manning et al, 2013). Event boundaries were created by an abrupt change in the shared task feature (e.g., Heusser et al, 2018;Wang & Egner, 2022). Each encoding phase was followed by a distractor task to create a brief delay between the memory encoding and retrieval phases.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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