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Hoon, Peter W. – Psychological Reports, 1974
Thirty college males in liberal arts curricula were assigned to study passages by three different methods: reading, reading with underlining, and reading with note taking. The results indicate the three groups did not differ on questions of comprehension. (Author/DE)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Psychological Studies, Reading Comprehension, Reading Skills
Iran-Nejad, Asghar; Ortony, Andrew – 1982
Proposing a shift in the locus of theoretical analysis of cognition, this paper argues that cognitive functioning may be more readily characterized without the mediation of long-term mental associations and structure. An account of cognition is proposed in which mental relations are transient functional relations, and in which psychological…
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Cognitive Processes, Comprehension, Epistemology
Yates, Jack; And Others – 1982
A shadowing paradigm was used to determine the extent to which subjects could comprehend a spoken message without allocating attention or awareness to it. The paradigm involved presenting subjects with a control passage describing neutral events and an experimental passage describing embarrassing events over an unattended auditory channel.…
Descriptors: Attention, Auditory Perception, Cognitive Processes, College Students
Cimbalo, Richard S.; Siska, Bonnie Lou – 1982
A study tested the theory that an item that stands out from its background is better remembered than one that is similar to the background (the isolation effect). Specifically, the study examined whether the isolation effect would be greater when there was a larger and more confusing mass of background items, whether position of the isolated item…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Learning Processes, Memory
Kimmel, Susan; MacGinitie, Walter H. – 1981
Twelve fifth and sixth grade students were located who had much greater difficulty understanding "inductively structured" paragraphs (with the main idea near the end) than understanding "deductively structured" paragraphs (with the main idea near the beginning). Compared to other students of equal overall reading ability, these…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Exceptional Child Research, Intermediate Grades, Paragraph Composition
Klauk, E. Russell – 1984
The reader-centered emphasis dominating the current literature reflects an assumption that what is learned from text, and how much is learned, is determined primarily by the reader. An alternative thesis, however, is that much of the responsibility for text comprehensibility may lie with the producer of the text. That is, the text needs to be…
Descriptors: Authors, Cognitive Processes, Coherence, Cohesion (Written Composition)
Munby, Hugh – 1985
This paper reviews the conceptual confusion surrounding the concept "scientific thinking" (also known as "the proceses of science,""scientific processes,""inquiry skills," and sometimes, "the scientific method"). It begins with three separate arguments, each supporting a particular claim: (1)…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Comprehension, Inquiry, Process Education
Sternberg, Robert J.; And Others – 1978
In order to investigate the nature of metaphoric generation, comprehension, and appreciation, 8 different groups of 16 subjects were asked to rate each of 20 terms within each of 8 categories (United States historical figures, modern world leaders, mammals, birds, fish, airplanes, land vehicles, and ships) on 21 scales such as "warlike…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Comprehension, Figurative Language, Language Research
Shoben, Edward J. – 1978
In a recent note, Catlin and Jones (1976) argued that the sentence picture comparison model of Carpenter and Just (1975) could not account for the results obtained in studies where the picture preceded the sentence. In the present note, it is argued that the model can handle the results without adding additional parameters and that the Carpenter…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Models, Pictorial Stimuli, Reading Comprehension
Levin, Joel R.; Lesgold, Alan M. – 1977
The value of pictures as prose-learning adjuncts is the topic of the study described in this report. The experiments involved in the study followed five basic guidelines: oral presentation was chosen in order to measure comprehension while eliminating word-decoding problems; elementary school children were the subjects; fictional narratives that…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Processes, Comprehension, Elementary Education
Rabin, Jeffrey L.; Zecker, Steven G. – 1982
Reading researchers and theorists are sharply divided as to how meaning is obtained from the printed word. Three current explanations are that (1) meaning is accessed directly, without any intermediate processes; (2) meaning is accessed only through an intermediate phonemic stage; and (3) both direct access and phonemic mediation can occur. To…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Language Research, Learning Theories
Strahan, David B. – 1981
Strategies used by 15 fifth and sixth grade students to comprehend written problem solving tasks were identified. A naturalistic protocol analysis procedure was used to gather and analyze students' verbal and written responses to 55 selected reading and thinking tasks. In the ten tasks selected for detailed analysis, students demonstrated marked…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Cognitive Processes, Comprehension, Intermediate Grades
Dubitsky, Tony – 1981
Research was conducted to investigate the effects of contextual information on the speed and accuracy with which two general classes of inferences were verified by readers. These types of inferences were based on information in conversations that were or were not topically ambiguous, depending upon the amount of available contextual information.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Communication Research, Comprehension
Dunay, Paul K.; And Others – 1981
A study tested the assumption found in schema theory that scripted knowledge automatically provides specific content details about scripted activity, thereby biasing a reader's immediate interpretation of a text. The study measured how quickly and accurately 16 college students could verify script related words. Subjects listened to four scripted…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Higher Education, Learning Theories
Winner, Ellen; And Others – 1978
Two tasks were used to choose between two rival accounts--cognitive vs. pragmatic--of children's failure to comprehend metaphors. A total of 120 children, in three age groups (6, 7, and 9 years) were given either an explication or a multiple choice task to assess comprehension of 15 novel comparisons expressed in five alternative forms varying in…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Processes, Comprehension, Intellectual Development
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