Supplementary Fig 1: Effect of distance from segment boundary on performance.
From: Precise temporal memories are supported by the lateral entorhinal cortex in humans

A one-way repeated-measures ANOVA was conducted to determine whether performance differed as a function of each trial’s distance from a segment boundary at encoding (n = 19 participants). A segment boundary is defined as the beginning or end of a video segment at encoding (the episode was split into three segments). We conducted a one-way repeated-measures ANOVA comparing trials that were of short (2–107 seconds), medium (108–186 seconds) and long (200–277 seconds) distances from a segment boundary, which was not statistically significant [F(2,18)= 3.29, p = 0.0506], indicating that error does not differ significantly based on a trial’s distance from a segment boundary.