Hippocorpus
To examine the cognitive processes of remembering and imagining and their traces in language, we introduce Hippocorpus, a dataset of 6,854 English diary-like short stories about recalled and imagined events. Using a crowdsourcing framework, we first collect recalled stories and summaries from workers, then provide these summaries to other workers who write imagined stories. Finally, months later, we collect a retold version of the recalled stories from a subset of recalled authors. Our dataset comes paired with author demographics (age, gender, race), their openness to experience, as well as some variables regarding the author's relationship to the event (e.g., how personal the event is, how often they tell its story, etc.). **New to V3**: We expand the Hippocorpus by releasing sentence-level event annotations on a set of 240 stories. 8 crowdworkers went through an imagined, a recalled, and a retold story about the same event, sentence by sentence, and annotated whether the sentence marked the beginning of a new minor or major event, and if so, whether the event was surprising or expected.