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Smith, Maverick E.; Kurby, Christopher A.; Bailey, Heather R. – Discourse Processes: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2023
We segment what we read into meaningful events, each separated by a discrete boundary. How does event segmentation during encoding relate to the structure of story information in long-term memory? To evaluate this question, participants read stories of fictional historical events and then engaged in a postreading verb arrangement task. In this…
Descriptors: Reading Processes, Short Term Memory, Recall (Psychology), Verbs
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Yeari, Menahem; Oudega, Marja; van den Broek, Paul – Journal of Research in Reading, 2017
The present study investigated the effect of text highlighting on online processing and memory of central and peripheral information. We compared processing time (using eye-tracking methodology) and recall of central and peripheral information for three types of highlighting: (a) highlighting of central information, (b) highlighting of peripheral…
Descriptors: Memory, Eye Movements, Reading Processes, Comparative Analysis
Li, Yanjie; Brantmeier, Cindy; Gao, Yanming; Hogrebe, Mark – Reading in a Foreign Language, 2022
In second language (L2) reading strategy research, two concerns need addressing: (1) the discrepancy in assessing strategy use between written surveys and verbal reports, and (2) the effect of using strategies on readers' comprehension outcomes when different types of comprehension tasks are utilized. The present study addressed these concerns by…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Reading Strategies, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning
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Ijalba, Elizabeth; Obler, Loraine K. – Reading in a Foreign Language, 2015
The Spanish writing system has consistent grapheme-to-phoneme correspondences (GPC), rendering it more transparent than English. We compared first-language (L1) orthographic transparency on how monolingual English- and Spanish-readers learned a novel writing system with a 1:1 (LT) and a 1:2 (LO) GPC. Our dependent variables were learning time,…
Descriptors: Native Language, Second Language Learning, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence, Spanish
Pellicer-Sanchez, Ana; Schmitt, Norbert – Reading in a Foreign Language, 2010
Nation (2006) has calculated that second language (L2) learners require much more vocabulary than previously thought to be functional with language (e.g., 8,000-9,000 word families to read independently). This level is far beyond the highest graded reader, and would be difficult to explicitly teach. One way for learners to be exposed to…
Descriptors: Spelling, Vocabulary Development, Novels, Incidental Learning
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Riggio, Mary Mabel; Cassidy, Kimberly W. – Early Education and Development, 2009
Research Findings: The current study examined preschoolers' processing of false belief situations presented in published picture books. Children were read one story with a plot that revolved around a single false belief occurrence and one story with multiple false belief occurrences. Children's narrative retellings of the stories were utilized as…
Descriptors: Reading Research, Picture Books, Preschool Children, Story Reading
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Reese, Elaine; Leyva, Diana; Sparks, Alison; Grolnick, Wendy – Early Education and Development, 2010
Research Findings: This study compared the unique effects of training low-income mothers in dialogic reading versus elaborative reminiscing on children's oral language and emergent literacy. Thirty-three low-income parents of 4-year-old children attending Head Start were randomly assigned to either dialogic reading, elaborative reminiscing, or a…
Descriptors: Reading Research, Reading Aloud to Others, Oral Language, Disadvantaged Youth
McCabe, Allyssa – 1980
A study was designed to test the hypothesis that memory for metaphor was primarily a function of the structure of the metaphor itself. Eighty undergraduate students rated the quality of subsets of 80 metaphors and later freely recalled them, while another 40 students simply read metaphors in their extended contexts and later received a surprise…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Metaphors, Reading Research, Recall (Psychology)
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Bowman, Margie – Reading World, 1981
Examines the background of schema theory and discusses the contention that content schemata is more important to the reader than textual schemata. Concludes that the more useful schemata is determined by the context rather than one schemata type always being more important than the other. (FL)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Memory, Reading Processes, Reading Research
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Weintraub, Samuel – Reading Teacher, 1969
Descriptors: Questioning Techniques, Reading Habits, Reading Research, Recall (Psychology)
Studeny, Kathy; Voss, James F. – 1979
This paper presents the detailed propositional analyses of the text employed in a study that compared the contents of recall protocols of high knowledge (HK) and low knowledge (LK) groups. The paper also includes the propositional analyses of the recall protocols of the HK and LK individuals, as well as detailed analyses of the results. (Author/FL)
Descriptors: Componential Analysis, Knowledge Level, Reading Research, Recall (Psychology)
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Freebody, Peter; Anderson, Richard C. – Discourse Processes, 1986
Presents results of a study indicating that, over many propositions appearing in passages that vary widely in content and vocabulary difficulty, early and later propositions are better recalled, and that the rated importance of a proposition predicts probability of recall independent of serial position. (HTH)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Reading Comprehension, Reading Processes, Reading Research
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Britton, Bruce K. – Journal of Reading Behavior, 1978
The purpose of this study was to identify cognitive processing activities that produce text learning in the absence of instructions to learn. (HOD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Reading Comprehension, Reading Research, Recall (Psychology)
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Sadoski, Mark; And Others – Journal of Reading Behavior, 1993
Presents and tests a theoretically derived causal model of the recall of sentences. Notes that the causal model identifies familiarity and concreteness as causes of comprehensibility; familiarity, concreteness, and comprehensibility as causes of interestingness; and all the identified variables as causes of both immediate and delayed recall.…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Models, Reading Comprehension, Reading Research
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Surber, John R.; Schroeder, Mark – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 2007
College students with either high or low prior domain knowledge (PK) read a text chapter presented in short pages on a computer monitor. Half of the participants read with headings present and half with headings absent. The computer recorded time spent reading and rereading each short page. Learning was assessed through a structured recall task.…
Descriptors: Prior Learning, Computer Uses in Education, Recall (Psychology), College Students
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