Abstract
Crossing a spatial boundary such as a doorway plays an important role in the temporal organization of episodic memory. However, despite the wealth of evidence showing that visual boundary structures in scenes affect our representation of space, no studies have tested the possibility that they also function as event boundaries even without active navigation. In this study, we used a nonnavigational scene-based memory task that required participants to remember a sequence of objects moving to various baskets in a scene. In the boundary condition, there was a freestanding boundary in the middle of the room, low enough to see the rest of the room beyond it. We found that the additional boundary within the scene was sufficient to trigger a larger response in the cortical visual scene network, the hippocampus, and their coordinated activity. These results suggest that active navigation across a spatial boundary such as a doorway into another room is not necessary to form an event boundary and that a visual representation of boundaries is sufficient to influence the organization of a hippocampal episodic memory.