Imagined versus Remembered Stories: Quantifying Differences in Narrative Flow
Maarten Sap, Anna Jafarpour, Yejin Choi, Noah A. Smith, James W., Pennebaker, and Eric Horvitz

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new measure called sequentiality, using GPT-3, to quantify differences in narrative flow between autobiographical and imagined stories, revealing that imagined stories have higher sequentiality.
Contribution
The study develops a novel computational measure of narrative flow, enabling comparison of imagined and autobiographical stories using large language models like GPT-3.
Findings
Imagined stories exhibit higher sequentiality than autobiographical stories.
Sequentiality increases in autobiographical stories retold after several months.
Lower sequentiality correlates with higher proportions of major events.
Abstract
Lifelong experiences and learned knowledge lead to shared expectations about how common situations tend to unfold. Such knowledge of narrative event flow enables people to weave together a story. However, comparable computational tools to evaluate the flow of events in narratives are limited. We quantify the differences between autobiographical and imagined stories by introducing sequentiality, a measure of narrative flow of events, drawing probabilistic inferences from a cutting-edge large language model (GPT-3). Sequentiality captures the flow of a narrative by comparing the probability of a sentence with and without its preceding story context. We applied our measure to study thousands of diary-like stories, collected from crowdworkers about either a recent remembered experience or an imagined story on the same topic. The results show that imagined stories have higher sequentiality…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTopic Modeling · Natural Language Processing Techniques · Wikis in Education and Collaboration
MethodsRefunds@Expedia|||How do I get a full refund from Expedia? · Attention Is All You Need · Linear Layer · 15 Ways to Contact How can i speak to someone at Delta Airlines · Dense Connections · Multi-Head Attention · Cosine Annealing · Softmax · Weight Decay · Byte Pair Encoding
