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Anderson, Richard C.; And Others – 1976
The present study investigated why it is that the more concrete the subject noun phrase of a sentence, the more likely the predicate is to be recalled when the subject noun phrase is the cue. The findings were that concretization dramatically influences both the probability of recognition of the subject noun phrase and the probability of recall of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Language Research, Memory, Models
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Anderson, Richard C.; Ortony, Andrew – Cognitive Psychology, 1975
Comprehension of a sentence entails constructing a particularized and elaborated mental representation, and this process depends more heavily on knowledge of the world and analysis of context than is generally appreciated. Existing associative or semantic network theories would be strained to accomodate this data. (Author/BJG)
Descriptors: Association (Psychology), Cognitive Processes, Context Clues, Higher Education
Anderson, Richard C.; And Others – 1976
Three experiments investigated the hypothesis that, when interpreted in context, general terms are typically encoded on the basis of an instantiation. The results indicated that a particular term naming the expected instantiation of a general term was a better cue for the recall of a sentence than the general term itself, even though the general…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Generalization, Language Research, Memory
Anderson, Richard C.; Pichert, James W. – 1977
College undergraduates read a story about two boys playing hooky from school from the perspective of either a burglar or a person interested in buying a home. After recalling the story once, subjects were directed to shift perspectives and then recall the story again. In two experiments, subjects produced on the second recall significantly more…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Literary Perspective, Memory
Anderson, Richard C.; Pichert, James W. – Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior, 1978
In these studies, people recalled additional, previously unrecalled information from stories following instruction to take a new perspective. The data clearly show the operation of retrieval processes independent from encoding processes. (SW)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cues, Language Processing, Language Research
Pichert, James W.; Anderson, Richard C. – 1976
The two studies outlined in this report gauged college undergraduates' ability to learn and to recall the content of certain passages when provided with "directed perspectives" or context clues. In the first study, 63 subjects were divided into three groups, were asked to read two stories, and were assigned a perspective (home buyer,…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Conceptual Schemes, Higher Education, Learning Processes
Anderson, Richard C. – 1977
This paper develops the thesis that the knowledge a person possesses has a potent influence on what he or she will learn and remember from exposure to discourse. After outlining some assumptions about the characteristics of the structures (schemata) in which existing knowledge is packaged, a theory of the processes involved in assimilating the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Comprehension, Elementary Secondary Education, Language Research
Anderson, Richard C.; And Others – 1977
Subjects read narratives about a meal at a fine restaurant or a trip to a supermarket. The same 18 items of food, attributed to the same characters, were mentioned in the same order in the two stories. As predicted from current formulations of schema theory, foods from categories determined to be part of most people's restaurant schemata were…
Descriptors: Advance Organizers, Cognitive Processes, College Students, Connected Discourse
Anderson, Richard C.; And Others – 1974
Two experiments were conducted, the purpose of which was to investigate the direct effects of questioning. In experiment one, 240 sophomores, juniors, and seniors from a small town high school read one of two versions of a 550-word passage describing the social behavior of the army ant. The subjects then took either a verbatim or paraphrase quiz,…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Educational Research, High School Students, Learning
Anderson, Richard C.; And Others – 1979
The effects of content schemata, embodying the reader's existing knowledge about a topic, on reading comprehension were examined in two experiments in which high school and college students were instructed to take a distinctive point of view while reading and recalling a story. Perspectives assigned before reading, shortly after reading, and long…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Content Area Reading, Higher Education, Memory