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The role of character goals and changes in body position in the processing of events in visual narratives
Kopatich, Ryan D.; Feller, Daniel P.; Kurby, Christopher A.; Magliano, Joseph P.. - : Springer International Publishing, 2019
Abstract: BACKGROUND: A growing body of research is beginning to understand how people comprehend sequential visual narratives. However, previous work has used materials that primarily rely on visual information (i.e., they contain minimal language information). The current work seeks to address how visual and linguistic information streams are coordinated in sequential image comprehension. In experiment 1, participants viewed picture stories and engaged in an event segmentation task. The extent to which critical points in the narrative depicted situational continuity of character goals and continuity in bodily position was manipulated. The likelihood of perceiving an event boundary and viewing latencies at critical locations were measured. Experiment 1 was replicated in the second experiment, without the segmentation task. That is, participants read the picture stories without deciding where the event boundaries occurred. RESULTS: Experiment 1 indicated that changes in character goals were associated with an increased likelihood of segmenting at the critical point, but changes in bodily position were not. A follow-up analysis, however, revealed that over the course of the entire story, changes in body position were a significant predictor of event segmentation. Viewing time, however, was affected by both goal and body position shifts. Experiment 2 corroborated the finding that viewing time was affected by changes in goals and body positions. CONCLUSION: The current study shows that changes in body position influence a viewer’s perception of event structure and event processing. This fits into a growing body of research that attempts to understand how consumers of multimodal media coordinate multiple information streams. The current study underscores the need for the systematic study of the visual, perceptual, and comprehension processes that occur during visual narrative understanding.
Keyword: Original Article
URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31286278
https://doi.org/10.1186/s41235-019-0176-1
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6614232/
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