- Ji, Yue;
- Andrews, Caroline;
- Sauppe, Sebastian;
- Flecken, Monique;
- Zariquiey, Roberto;
- laka, itziar;
- Daum, Moritz M.;
- Ünal, Ercenur;
- Papafragou, Anna;
- Rissman, Lilia;
- van Putten, Saskia;
- Majid, Asifa;
- Manhardt, Francie;
- Özyürek, Asli;
- Isasi-Isasmendi, Arrate;
- Meyer, Martin;
- Bickel, Balthasar
Humans are surprisingly adept at interpreting what is happening around them – they spontaneously and rapidly segment and organize their dynamic experience into coherent event construals. Such event construals may offer a starting point for assembling a linguistic description of the event during speaking (Levelt, 1989). However, the precise format of event representations and their mapping to language have remained elusive, partly because research on how people mentally segment and perceive events (see Radvansky & Zacks, 2014 for a review) has largely proceeded separately from analyses of how events are encoded in language (see Truswell, 2019 for a review).