cached image

Jeffrey M. Zacks

Affiliations: 
Washington University, Saint Louis, St. Louis, MO 
Area:
event perception, spatial reasoning, memory
Website:
http://dcl.wustl.edu/~jzacks/
Google:
"Jeffrey Zacks"
Bio:

My lab studies perception and cognition using the methods of experimental psychology and neuroscience. One of our primary interests is in how people parse ongoing activity into meaningful events. The sensory world has been described as "a blooming, buzzing confusion," yet we seem to talk and think about activity as consisting of a modest number of discrete events. My lab's work suggests that this is so because specialized brain systems form stable representations that chunk intervals of time into coherent events, and chunk events into larger super-events. This segmentation is adaptive—people who don't segment activity very well also don't remember it as well later.

(Show more)

Mean distance: 16.12 (cluster 60)
 
SNBCP
BETA: Related publications

Publications

You can help our author matching system! If you notice any publications incorrectly attributed to this author, please sign in and mark matches as correct or incorrect.

Smith ME, Hall CS, Membreno R, et al. (2024) Attention to event segmentation improves memory in young adults: A lifespan study. Psychology and Aging
Richmond LL, Gold DA, Zacks JM. (2024) Improving Event Cognition: From the Laboratory to the Clinic. Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition. 6: 153-157
Sargent JQ, Richmond LL, Kellis DM, et al. (2023) No evidence for chunking in spatial memory of route experience. Journal of Experimental Psychology. Learning, Memory, and Cognition
Kumar M, Goldstein A, Michelmann S, et al. (2023) Bayesian Surprise Predicts Human Event Segmentation in Story Listening. Cognitive Science. 47: e13343
Stawarczyk D, Wahlheim CN, Zacks JM. (2023) Adult age differences in event memory updating: The roles of prior-event retrieval and prediction. Psychology and Aging
Pitts BL, Eisenberg ML, Bailey HR, et al. (2023) Cueing natural event boundaries improves memory in people with post-traumatic stress disorder. Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications. 8: 26
Bezdek MA, Nguyen TT, Hall CS, et al. (2022) The multi-angle extended three-dimensional activities (META) stimulus set: A tool for studying event cognition. Behavior Research Methods
Richmond LL, Sargent JQ, Zacks JM. (2022) Virtual navigation in healthy aging: Activation during learning and deactivation during retrieval predicts successful memory for spatial locations. Neuropsychologia. 173: 108298
Pitts BL, Eisenberg ML, Bailey HR, et al. (2022) PTSD is associated with impaired event processing and memory for everyday events. Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications. 7: 35
Wahlheim CN, Eisenberg ML, Stawarczyk D, et al. (2022) Understanding Everyday Events: Predictive-Looking Errors Drive Memory Updating. Psychological Science. 9567976211053596
See more...