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During perception, people segment continuous activity into discrete events.
Event partonomies have been studied by looking at how people segment activity as it happens.
(Although the "People" segment of the "Modern Starts" exhibition was dismantled earlier last week, the "Things" and "Places" sections -- including "Unreal City" -- remain on view through March 14).
Here is a simple example: when explaining routes, people segment them as a sequence of turns at landmarks (Denis, 1997; Tversky & Lee, 1998).
Similarly, in describing actions that are continuous in time, like doing the dishes or making a bed, people segment the actions into discrete steps and substeps by accomplishment of goals and subgoals, not by time per se (e.g., Tversky, Zacks, & Hard, 2008).
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The answer appeared almost immediately: a specific recipe that, according to Moskowitz's data, produced a score of 78 from the people in Segment 1.
He typed in a few commands, instructing the computer to give him the formulation that would score the highest with those people in Segment 1.
"It's not realistic to expect people to segment that significantly," says Gilliland.
If people who segment activity more effectively have better subsequent memory for that activity, is it possible to improve memory by intervening to improve segmentation?
People who segment activity into events more adaptively have better subsequent memory for that activity, and event boundaries are remembered better than event middles.
Thus, a survey team comprising three interviewers is able to interview 50 people (one segment) in a day.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com