Behavioral, Physiological, and Neural Signatures of Surprise during Naturalistic Sports Viewing

Neuron(2021)

Cited 74|Views21
No score
Abstract
Surprise signals a discrepancy between past and current beliefs. It is theorized to be linked to affective experiences, the creation of particularly resilient memories, and segmentation of the flow of experience into discrete perceived events. However, the ability to precisely measure naturalistic surprise has remained elusive. We used advanced basketball analytics to derive a quantitative measure of surprise and characterized its behavioral, physiological, and neural correlates in human subjects observing basketball games. We found that surprise was associated with segmentation of ongoing experiences, as reflected by subjectively perceived event boundaries and shifts in neocortical patterns underlying belief states. Interestingly, these effects differed by whether surprising moments contradicted or bolstered current predominant beliefs. Surprise also positively correlated with pupil dilation, activation in subcortical regions associated with dopamine, game enjoyment, and long-term memory. These investigations support key predictions from event segmentation theory and extend theoretical conceptualizations of surprise to real-world contexts. ### Competing Interest Statement K.P. runs a for-profit sports analytics website and generated the win probability metrics against which we compared our belief-state model. However, his role in this project was limited to sharing and discussing these metrics. Furthermore, although he may benefit from larger exposure, there is no foreseeable commercial benefit he would obtain from the results of this publication. The other authors declare no competing interests.
More
Translated text
Key words
surprise,event perception,prediction error,naturalistic stimuli,dopamine,memory,sports psychology,reinforcement learning,fMRI,pupil dilation
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined