How do children deal with inconsistencies in text? An eye fixation and self-paced reading study in good and poor reading comprehenders.

Read Writ

Department of Educational Neuroscience, Vrije Universiteit, Van der Boechorststraat 1, 1081 BT Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Published: August 2012

In two experiments, we investigated comprehension monitoring in 10-12 years old children differing in reading comprehension skill. The children's self-paced reading times (Experiment 1) and eye fixations and regressions (Experiment 2) were measured as they read narrative texts in which an action of the protagonist was consistent or inconsistent with a description of the protagonist's character given earlier. The character description and action were adjacent (local condition) or separated by a long filler paragraph (global condition). The self-paced reading data (Experiment 1), the initial reading and rereading data (Experiment 2), together with the comprehension question data (both experiments), are discussed within the situation model framework and suggest that poor comprehenders find difficulty in constructing a richly elaborated situation model. Poor comprehenders presumably fail to represent character information in the model as a consequence of which they are not able to detect inconsistencies in the global condition (in which the character information is lost from working memory). The patterns of results rule out an explanation in terms of impaired situation model updating ability.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3395345PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11145-011-9337-4DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

self-paced reading
12
situation model
12
global condition
8
data experiment
8
poor comprehenders
8
reading
6
children deal
4
deal inconsistencies
4
inconsistencies text?
4
text? eye
4

Similar Publications

Visual narratives, like comics, at times show depictions of characters' imagination, dreams, or flashbacks, which seem incongruent with the ongoing primary narrative. Such "domain constructions" thus integrate an auxiliary domain (e.g.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Task adaptation, characterized by a progressive increase in speed throughout experimental trials, has been extensively observed across various paradigms. Yet, the underlying mechanisms driving this phenomenon remain unclear. According to the learning-based explanation, participants are implicitly learning, becoming more proficient over time.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: Perceptual representations in language comprehension were examined using sentence-picture verification tasks. However, concerns have been raised regarding the suitability of concrete pictures for representing abstract concepts compared to image-schematic diagrams. To assess the perceptual representations of spatial and abstract domains in both first language (L1) and second language (L2) processing, the study tests bilingual speakers' mental imagery on the basis of the simulation-based L1 comprehension model and proposes a simulation-based L2 comprehension model, supported by empirical evidence from an innovative sentence-diagram verification paradigm.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Past research suggests that Working Memory plays a role in determining relative clause attachment bias. Disambiguation preferences may further depend on Processing Speed and explicit memory demands in linguistic tasks. Given that Working Memory and Processing Speed decline with age, older adults offer a way of investigating the factors underlying disambiguation preferences.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The study explores how comprehenders resolve filler-gap dependencies in incremental processing, focusing on the Norwegian language and examining why gap-filling is often paused in certain contexts.
  • Results from a self-paced reading study reveal that Norwegian participants show filled-gap effects in embedded questions, supporting grammar-based explanations over processing-based ones, indicating that such questions are not considered grammatical islands in Norwegian.
  • Additionally, the research investigates whether the concept of active filler-gap processing aligns with probabilistic ambiguity resolution and finds that while surprisal values can predict the location of filled-gap effects, they fail to accurately measure their magnitude, suggesting the need for further mechanisms or improved models of human expectation in processing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!