Journal Article10.1037/0033-2909.127.1.3
Event structure in perception and conception.
Jeffrey M. Zacks,Barbara Tversky +1 more
TL;DR: An analysis of how people use event structure in perception, understanding, planning, and action is constructed and an explanation of how multiple sources of information interact in event perception and conception is explained.
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Abstract: Events can be understood in terms of their temporal structure. The authors first draw on several bodies of research to construct an analysis of how people use event structure in perception, understanding, planning, and action. Philosophy provides a grounding for the basic units of events and actions. Perceptual psychology provides an analogy to object perception: Like objects, events belong to categories, and, like objects, events have parts. These relationships generate 2 hierarchical organizations for events: taxonomies and partonomies. Event partonomies have been studied by looking at how people segment activity as it happens. Structured representations of events can relate partonomy to goal relationships and causal structure; such representations have been shown to drive narrative comprehension, memory, and planning. Computational models provide insight into how mental representations might be organized and transformed. These different approaches to event structure converge on an explanation of how multiple sources of information interact in event perception and conception.
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Citations
The Theory of Event Coding (TEC): a framework for perception and action planning.
TL;DR: A new framework for a more adequate theoretical treatment of perception and action planning is proposed, in which perceptual contents and action plans are coded in a common representational medium by feature codes with distal reference, showing that the main assumptions are well supported by the data.
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AVA: A Video Dataset of Spatio-Temporally Localized Atomic Visual Actions
Chunhui Gu,Chen Sun,David A. Ross,Carl Vondrick,Caroline Pantofaru,Yeqing Li,Sudheendra Vijayanarasimhan,George Toderici,Susanna Ricco,Rahul Sukthankar,Cordelia Schmid,Jitendra Malik,Jitendra Malik +12 more
- 18 Jun 2018
TL;DR: The AVA dataset densely annotates 80 atomic visual actions in 437 15-minute video clips, where actions are localized in space and time, resulting in 1.59M action labels with multiple labels per person occurring frequently.
Conducting Video Research in the Learning Sciences: Guidance on Selection, Analysis, Technology, and Ethics
Sharon J. Derry,Roy Pea,Brigid Barron,Randi A. Engle,Frederick Erickson,Ricki Goldman,Rogers Hall,Timothy Koschmann,Jay L. Lemke,Miriam Gamoran Sherin,Bruce L. Sherin +10 more
TL;DR: This work addresses 4 challenges for scientists who collect and use video records to conduct research in and on complex learning environments, and investigates how to encourage broad video sharing and reuse while adequately protecting the rights of research participants who are recorded.
Event perception: a mind-brain perspective.
TL;DR: A theory according to which the perception of boundaries between events arises from ongoing perceptual processing and regulates attention and memory is proposed.
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