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Character mediation of story generation via...
Journal article

Character mediation of story generation via protagonist insertion

Abstract

The current study set out to examine how the presence or absence of depicted characters in visual narratives influences the degree of character-related content in improvised stories. The experiment consisted of trials of oral storytelling that were prompted by wordless comics. The degree of character content in the storylines was varied from being character-based—showing people engaging in social interactions—to being characterless, for example scenes depicting natural phenomena. An intermediate “character-implied” condition was also investigated, exemplified by the scene of a tornado passing through a town, where no people were depicted but in which their presence was strongly suggested. Linguistic content analysis of 472 stories demonstrated indistinguishable use of third-person pronouns (she/he) between character-implied and character-containing scenarios. An analysis of character presence demonstrated that storytellers inserted protagonists into the character-implied stories as vehicles for the actions taking place. This phenomenon reveals the character-driven nature of story creation.

Authors

Brown S; Berry M; Dawes E; Hughes A; Tu C

Journal

Journal of Cognitive Psychology, Vol. 31, No. 3, pp. 326–342

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Publication Date

April 3, 2019

DOI

10.1080/20445911.2019.1624367

ISSN

2044-5911

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