Ok good. Parking Lot problem and Doorway Effect are the same problem. Next is to see if Gabriel A. Radvansky’s work blossomed since 2012 or if I’d be following a rabbit trail. [limen / liminal stuff]
The Event Horizon Model
Under different conditions, event boundaries can either impair
or improve memory. How can these seemingly opposite effects
both be true? To resolve this issue and provide an explanatory
account for thinking about such issues, the Event Horizon
Model was developed. This is a relatively simple framework
based on five principles:
(a) the segmentation of streams of activity into event units;
(b) the superior availability of information in the working event model;
(c) the construction of a causal network that can then influence retrieval;
(d) the superiority of memory for information stored across multiple events in noncompetitive attribute retrieval; and
(e) the occurrence of retrieval interference for information stored across multiple events in competitive event retrieval
https://memorylab.nd.edu/assets/258869/radvansky_2012_current_directions_.pdf
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“…but before you rose your hand to grasp the sturdy handles of the wooden cupboard, you begin to think,“ what am I supposed to be doing?”
Doorway Effect.
Location Updating Effect.
Limen / liminious space
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