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Showing 31 to 45 of 112 results Save | Export
Gentner, Donald R. – Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior, 1976
Describes a study of the recall of narrative prose. Serial structure at first influenced which elements were remembered, but as the Ss remembered more, the story grammar structure became the dominant influence over the elements remembered. (Author/RM)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Language Research, Learning Processes, Memory
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Prosser, G. V. – Instructional Science, 1974
A look at an experiment using prose in which questions are categorized as 1) active; or 2) passive. (HB)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Learning, Learning Processes, Methods Research
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Benton, Stephen L.; And Others – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1983
Three experiments were performed to investigate differential recall of prose materials as a function of the number of decisions made about the content during reading. Results indicated that (1) recall is increased as the number of decisions is increased and (2) the effects on recall are noted only in conditions requiring decisions. (Author/LC)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Decision Making, Encoding (Psychology), Higher Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Omanson, Richard C. – Discourse Processes, 1982
Presents an analysis of prose narratives that allows content to be identified as central and provides a priori rationale for why the content is central. Investigates which content is supportive of, or distracting to, the central content. (FL)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Discourse Analysis, Evaluation Methods, Learning Theories
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Kareev, Yaakov – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1981
Forty children listened to stories and then answered questions about temporally neutral and temporally tagged information. Observed interactions among age, additional processing, and kind of information demonstrated the importance of the distinction between these types of information for developmental studies of memory of prose. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style
Baker, Linda – 1983
College students differing in verbal ability read and evaluated their comprehension of expository passages. Three different types of problems were embedded within the passages to provide opportunities for students to reveal the use of different standards of evaluation. Half of the subjects were informed that they should use three particular…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Evaluation Criteria, Higher Education, Prose
Collins, Allan; And Others – 1977
This report examines the theory that when people understand a text, they create a complex scenario (or model) within which the events described might plausibly occur. In order to study construction and revision of such models, five subjects were given difficult-to-understand texts, and were later asked to discuss the processing they went through…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Cognitive Processes, Models, Prose
Meyer, Bonnie J. F. – 1973
The question of how people learn and remember information from complex written materials is explored by means of Grime's semantic grammar of propositions and the author's analysis of the content structure of prose. This paper, presented at the 1973 Interdisciplinary Meeting on Structural Learning, first discusses such elements of the semantic…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Content Analysis, Learning Processes, Memory
Meyer, Bonnie J. F.; McConkie, George W. – 1972
In order to determine what aspects of information from prose are available for recall after one presentation of a passage and what aspects are learned with additional presentations, two passages were divided into idea units. These units were placed in a logical hierarchical structure for each passage, and scores were assigned to the idea units on…
Descriptors: Association (Psychology), Cognitive Processes, College Students, Conceptual Schemes
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Benton, Stephen L.; And Others – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1983
Seven experiments were performed to address three issues: prose decisions of different levels of difficulty, directed attention effect, and the effects of decisions on memorability of prose among relatively good and relatively poor readers. (Author/PN)
Descriptors: Attention, Cognitive Processes, Decision Making, Difficulty Level
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Jensen, Larry; And Others – Psychological Reports, 1971
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Context Clues, Inhibition
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Glover, John A.; And Others – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1982
A distinctiveness of encoding hypothesis, as applied to the facilitative effects that higher order objectives have on readers' prose recall, was evaluated in three experiments. Results suggest that distinctiveness of encoding may offer a theoretical basis for the effects of adjunct aids as well as a guide to their construction. (Author/GK)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Conceptual Tempo, Decision Making, Difficulty Level
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Christie, Joseph M.; Just, Marcel Adam – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1976
Subjects read a passage and were questioned about the location or content of certain items in the passage. Performance was measured by monitoring response latencies and eye fixations. Apparently the locative information provides an index to the spatial distribution of sentences in the passage. (Author/RC)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Eye Fixations, Memory, Prose
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
McDaniel, Mark A.; And Others – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 1994
Two experiments with 112 college students investigated how subjects might modulate their reading strategies as a function of how they expect to be tested. Test-expectancy subjects, regardless of the test expected, are more apt to identify and focus on important information than are subjects without a specific test expectancy. (SLD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Essays, Expectation
Spiro, Rand J.; Esposito, Joseph – 1977
The hypothesis that pragmatic inferences presented in text are taken for granted, superficially processed, and not stably or enduringly represented in memory was investigated. Stories were read which in some conditions contained information vitiating the implicational force of explicit inferences. The vitiating information was presented either…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Memory, Prose
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