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Alba, Joseph W.; And Others – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Learning and Memory, 1981
Subjects read passages taken from Bransford and Johnson's materials either with or without the context-inducing title provided. The presence of the title increased comprehension and recall but had no effect on recognition. Activation of relevant information already stored in memory may not be essential to the encoding process. (Author/RD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cues, Higher Education, Prose
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Schmid, Richard F.; Kulhavy, Raymond W. – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 1981
Context orientation and depth of processing were tested as possible explanations for thematic organization. The process of searching for the theme of prose passages was detrimental to recall. Theme statements facilitated recall when provided prior to each passage. The theme search process was beneficial only when the correct theme was identified.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Context Clues, Higher Education, Learning Processes
Adams, Marilyn Jager; Collins, Allan – 1977
This paper provides a general description of schema-theoretic models of language comprehension and examines some extensions of such models to the study of reading. The goal of schema theory is to specify the interface between the reader and the text: to specify how the reader's knowledge interacts with and shapes the information on the page and to…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Comprehension, Models, Prose
Goetz, Ernest T. – 1977
Two studies investigated whether variations in the importance of inferences and the salience of premises within a text would affect the probability that the inference would be made. Six stories of about 500 words were used, with eight variations of each story. The target inference, and its plausibility, was constant across all versions. Inference…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Memory, Prose, Reading Comprehension
Pichert, James W. – 1979
Two studies assessed third, fifth, and seventh grade children's sensitivity to relative importance in prose. Children rated importance similarly to adults when assigned perspectives from which to read. The children's ratings were not necessarily idiosyncratic: they agreed more with each other than with adults rating the same material.…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Processes, Elementary Education, Perspective Taking
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Jenkins, Joseph R.; Bausell, R. Barker – Journal of Reading Behavior, 1976
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Learning, Postsecondary 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
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
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
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
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Waters, Harriet Salatas – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 1983
Relations between rank of propositions in descriptive passages, importance ratings, and recall were evaluated in experiments using undergraduates to determine whether passage structure and importance ratings are necessarily related. Importance ratings varied with instructions, but subjects recalled superordinate propositions better than…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Individual Differences, Prose
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Brozo, William G.; And Others – Journal of Reading, 1983
Suggests that chunking might improve the reading comprehension of good as well as poor readers. (FL)
Descriptors: Academic Aptitude, Cognitive Processes, College Students, Higher Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Rickards, John P. – Review of Educational Research, 1979
Methods developed by Rothkopf; McConkie, Rayner and Wilson; McGaw and Grotelueschen; DiVesta and Rickards to assess prose processes produced by adjunct postquestions are reviewed. The processes are: specific backward; general backward; specific forward; and general forward. (MH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Educational Research, Learning Theories, Prose
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