Publication | Closed Access
Processing narrative time shifts.
359
Citations
28
References
1996
Year
First-person NarrativeChronological DistanceNarrative SummarizationNarrative And IdentityCognitionPsycholinguisticsSocial SciencesNarrative RepresentationReading ComprehensionNarrative Time ShiftsLanguage AcquisitionNarrative Studies (Narrative Psychology)MemoryReadingDiscourse AnalysisTemporal InformationLanguage StudiesTemporalityNarrated Story EventsCognitive ScienceNarrative TheoryNarrative ExtractionNarrative Studies (Comparative Literature)Language ComprehensionLinguistics
This study examined how the chronological distance between 2 consecutively narrated story events affects the on-line comprehension and mental representation of these events. College students read short narrative passages from a computer screen and responded to recognition probes. The results of 4 experiments consistently demonstrated that readers used temporal information to construct situation models while comprehending narratives. First, sentence reading times increased when there was a narrative time shift (e.g., as denoted by an hour later) as opposed to when there was no narrative time shift (e.g., as denoted by a moment later). Second, information from the previously narrated event was less accessible when it was followed by a time shift than when it was not. Third, 2 events that were separated by a narrative time shift were less strongly connected in long-term memory than 2 events that were not separated by a narrative time shift. The results suggest that readers use a strong iconicity assumption during story comprehension.
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