Movie-watching
Journal: Nature Communications Title: Movie-watching evokes ripple-like activity within events and at event boundaries Authors: Marta Silva, Xiongbo Wu, Marc Sabio, Estefanía Conde-Blanco, Pedro Roldán, et al. Date: 1 July 2025 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-60788-0 Study type: Human intracranial electrophysiology (observational / exploratory)
🎯 Aim
To investigate whether ripple-like activity (a neural oscillatory pattern ~80–120 Hz, known from hippocampal sharp-wave ripples) occurs in humans during naturalistic experiences, particularly during movie watching, and whether such ripples align with event boundaries and within-event saliency.
🧠 Methods
- Participants: 14 epilepsy patients undergoing iEEG (intracranial EEG).
- Stimuli: Narrative films with annotated event boundaries.
- Analysis:
- Detection of ripple-like events in medial temporal lobe (MTL) and other regions.
- Temporal alignment with annotated cognitive events.
- Comparison of ripple rate and power across boundary vs. within-event segments.
✅ Key Findings
- Ripple-like activity increases at event boundaries, suggesting encoding or segmentation functions.
- Ripples also increase within events, especially during emotionally or perceptually salient moments.
- Stronger ripple coupling was observed across MTL and high-level cortical regions (e.g., precuneus, medial PFC).
📉 Limitations
- Epilepsy bias: All subjects were patients with drug-resistant epilepsy, which may affect generalizability.
- Correlational design: Cannot determine causal role of ripples in perception or memory.
- Ripple detection thresholds: May vary across individuals and cortical regions; risk of false positives or artifact contamination.
💡 Significance
- Supports the idea that cognitive event segmentation in naturalistic contexts involves ripple-like neural dynamics.
- Provides evidence that memory-related oscillations are not restricted to sleep or explicit tasks, but extend to real-life experiences.
- Suggests new approaches to studying human cognition through naturalistic paradigms (e.g., movies) rather than artificial tasks.
🧾 Conclusion
This exploratory iEEG study provides compelling evidence that ripple-like activity is modulated by narrative event structure during passive movie-watching. It contributes to bridging the gap between controlled cognitive neuroscience and real-world neural processing, though replication in non-clinical populations and mechanistic work is still needed.