Human brain activity time-locked to perceptual event boundaries.
Posted in movies, events, cognition, neurocognition, cog-neuro, perception, fmri, ijceell06, narrative, neuro-sync, neurology, time-oriented-science on November 3rd, 2006Nat Neurosci, Vol. 4, No. 6. (June 2001), pp. 651-655.
Temporal structure has a major role in human understanding of everyday events. Observers are able to segment ongoing activity into temporal parts and sub-parts that are reliable, meaningful and correlated with ecologically relevant features of the action. Here we present evidence that a network of brain regions is tuned to perceptually salient event boundaries, both during intentional event segmentation and during naive passive viewing of events. Activity within this network may provide a basis for parsing the temporally evolving environment into meaningful units.
Original post by JM Zacks