“…To study how event boundaries affect memory, researchers have devised a variety of experimental manipulations, including interleaving different stimulus classes (e.g., Clewett and Davachi, 2021; Dubrow and Davachi, 2013, 2016; DuBrow and Davachi, 2014; Sols et al, 2017), changes in perceptual context (e.g., Heusser et al, 2018; Gurguryan et al, 2021), timing context (van de Ven, Jäckels, & De Weerd, 2021), or task sets (Wang & Egner, 2022), moving through different rooms (e.g., Horner et al, 2016), and eliciting reward prediction errors (Rouhani, Norman, Niv, & Bornstein, 2020). In all of these studies, a consistent finding is that participants are better at remembering the temporal order of two items that occurred within the same event, compared to two items that appeared on either side of an event boundary.…”