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Showing 1 to 15 of 32 results Save | Export
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Singer, Murray – Discourse Processes, 1993
Outlines three basic views of how readers infer causal connections and how they generate causal inferences. Evaluates these three hypotheses with reference to current research in the field. (HB)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Discourse Modes, Higher Education, Inferences
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Perfetti, Charles A. – Discourse Processes, 1993
Considers the difference between commonplace inferences versus more elusive inferences in reading processes. Claims that higher level inferences may be restricted in part because they do not operate in response to simple memory symbols but depend on complex compositional representations not always available. (HB)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Discourse Modes, Higher Education, Inferences
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Kintsch, Walter – Discourse Processes, 1993
Suggests that the term "inference" itself has had a negative effect on the study of how information is elaborated and reduced in text processing. Discusses some of the current views of inferencing in text comprehension. Suggests viewing information reduction processes within the same framework as information accretion. (HB)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Discourse Modes, Higher Education, Inferences
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Borland, Ron; Flammer, August – Discourse Processes, 1985
Reports the findings of a study showing that the importance or salience of a text at the time of reading has little effect on recognition of specific features from the prose. (HTH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Reading Processes
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Smith, Edward E.; Swinney, David A. – Discourse Processes, 1992
Studies how readers process text in the absence or presence of a relevant schema. Analyzes the results of a study in which subjects were required to read vague texts. Indicates that schemas affect on-line comprehension and that reading without a schema involves certain key strategies. (HB)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Discourse Modes, Higher Education, Reading Processes
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Zwaan, Rolf A.; van Oostendorp, Herre – Discourse Processes, 1993
Investigates whether spatial situation models are constructed in naturalistic story comprehension. Claims that, during normal reading, readers are not very much engaged in constructing, maintaining, and updating a spatial situation model. (HB)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Inferences, Narration
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Long, Debra L.; Seely, Mark R.; Oppy, Brian J. – Discourse Processes, 1999
Notes that less skilled readers have difficulty suppressing active, but irrelevant, information during comprehension. Investigates whether the mechanism responsible for suppressing the inappropriate meaning of a word is an automatic process or a strategic, controlled one. Finds that less skilled readers may have difficulty executing a strategic…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Reading Achievement, Reading Difficulties
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Marshall, Nancy; Glock, Marvin D. – Reading Research Quarterly, 1978
Supports Frederiksen's (1975) model of the structure of text and of memory through a study of the effects of manipulation of four aspects of text structure with community college and Ivy League subjects. (AA)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Memory, Models
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Kent, Thomas – Rhetoric Review, 1989
Explains how the Sophistic tradition, an alternative to the Platonic-Aristotelian rhetorical tradition, provides the historical foundation for a paralogic rhetoric that treats discourse production and analysis as open-ended dialogic activities and not as a codifiable system. Argues that teachers must examine the powerful paralogic/hermeneutic…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Hermeneutics, Higher Education, Reading Processes
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Hoover, Michael L. – Discourse Processes, 1997
Indicates a facilitation in undergraduate students' reading time for congruent text marking for both cohesion and textual structure that manifested itself at different points in the sentence. Suggests that readers are highly sensitive to coherence marking devices, and strictly local coherence models cannot completely account for what readers are…
Descriptors: Cohesion (Written Composition), Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Language Processing
Miller, Susan – 1981
Competing views of written texts, of the process of writing, and of the purposes of the scholarly investigation of written discourse appear inherently at odds. Today composition theory is often demeaned as being only pedagogical while literary study is granted the status of a self-fulfilling academic pursuit. What is needed is a model or matrix…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Interaction, Literary Criticism
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Carey, Robert F.; And Others – Reading Research Quarterly, 1981
A study by R. Anderson, R. Reynolds, D. Schallert, and E. Goetz was replicated to determine the possible effects of contextual constraints on the findings of the original study. Results suggested that context-of-situation and background are both powerful predictors of interpretive frameworks of reading comprehension. (MKM)
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Critical Reading, Discourse Analysis, Educational Background
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van den Broek, Paul; Trabasso, Tom – Discourse Processes, 1986
Describes a study contrasting hierarchical and causal approaches to story understanding indicating that when the number of causal connections increases, the likelihood of summarization for both goal and other statements increases. Suggests that the importance accorded to a statement in a story structure is the result of causal reasoning during…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Connected Discourse, Discourse Analysis, Higher Education
Rosenblatt, Louise M. – 1977
The tendency to think of a literary work as an object or entity existing apart from author and reader has been the greatest stumbling block in literary criticism and the teaching of literature. The transaction between a reader and a text involves the reader in a highly complex, ongoing process of selection and organization. Keeping the reader's…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Educational Research, English Instruction, Higher Education
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Welch, Cyril – Philosophy and Rhetoric, 1981
Analyzes the process of reading philosophical works. Considers reflective reading a performative act in which the genuine reader enters into a dialogue, questions, recollects, and rereads. (PD)
Descriptors: Content Area Reading, Critical Reading, Discourse Analysis, Higher Education
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