10 research outputs found

    Using eye-tracking to assess sourcing during multiple document reading: A critical analysis

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    During the last 15 years, there have been some efforts to extend the use of eye - tracking to researching reading in complex contexts, such as the reading of multiple documents. The research community involved in this extension has been interested in higher - order comprehensio n processes occurring in complex reading contexts, such as sourcing, defined as the processes of attending to, representing, evaluating, and using available or accessible information about the sources of textual content. In this article, we argue that exte nding eye - tracking research to investigate more complex reading contexts has been made without critically reflecting on its validity in those contexts . Specifically, because eye - tracking captures automatic as well as conscious processes, it is currently an open question how consistently eye - tracking captures the strategic sourcing processes that take place during multiple document reading, in particular when using real documents that include salient source information that may attract bottom - up fixations. I n contrast, subjective methods , such as interviews , mainly target conscious processes, and may th erefore be a more valid and generalizable measure of strategic sourcing activities . W e compared sourcing indicators based on eye - tracking measures to sourcing indicated by a post - reading interview. Results suggest ed that curren t eye - tracking indices of sourcin g are not universally valid measures, and that simpler methods, such as asking readers whether they paid attention to source information , may be more suite d to assess strategic sourcing during multiple document reading

    Processing and learning from multiple sources: a comparative case study of students with dyslexia working in a multiple source multimedia context

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    This study investigated how four 10th-grade students with dyslexia processed and integrated information across web pages and representations when learning in a multiple source multimedia context. Eye movement data showed that participants' processing of the materials varied with respect to their initial exploration of the web pages, their overall processing time, and the linearity of their processing patterns, with post-learning interviews indicating the deliberate, strategic considerations underlying each participant's processing pattern. Eye movement data in terms of fixation duration and percentage of regressions also corroborated the findings of formal, diagnostic assessments. Finally, it was found that participants differed with respect to how much factual information they learned from working with the materials and how well they were able to integrate information across the web pages and representations, with results suggesting particular problems with learning factual information and, at the same time,constructing a coherent mental representation of the issue, as well as with drawing on textual information in the integration process. This study brings together two research areas that essentially have been kept apart in theory and research, that is, dyslexia and multimedia learning, and it provides unique information about the role of individual differences in multiple source multimedia contexts

    Motivación y estimación del tiempo en el uso de herramientas internet informacionales y dialógicas

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    Se analiza la relación existente entre el grado de interés o motivación y estimación del tiempo (aspectos psicológicos) en la realización de tareas informacionales y dialógicas (aspectos comunicacionales) mediadas por internet en adolescentes chilenos. Se empleó una muestra estratificada de 120 estudiantes de 7 liceos de Chile con una media de edad de 15 años. Todos los participantes debían realizar de forma sucesiva dos tareas por internet: una primera tarea de comunicación vertical (búsqueda de información con el empleo del Google) y una segunda tarea de comunicación horizontal (diálogo por mensajería). Para cada una de las tareas se medía el tiempo percibido y el grado de interés. Los resultados muestran un interés significativamente mayor y un tiempo estimado significativamente menor en la tarea de comunicación horizontal. Desde aquí se pueden proyectar usos informacionales y educativos de interne

    The cognitive and linguistic foundations of early reading development: A Norwegian latent variable longitudinal study

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    The authors present the results of a 2-year longitudinal study of 228 Norwegian children beginning some 12 months before formal reading instruction began. The relationships between a range of cognitive and linguistic skills (letter knowledge, phoneme manipulation, visual–verbal paired-associate learning, rapid automatized naming (RAN), short-term memory, and verbal and nonverbal ability) were investigated and related to later measures of word recognition in reading. Letter knowledge, phoneme manipulation, and RAN were independent longitudinal predictors of early reading (word recognition) skills in the regular Norwegian orthography. Early reading skills initially appeared well described as a unitary construct that then showed rapid differentiation into correlated subskills (word decoding, orthographic choice, text reading, and nonword reading) that showed very high levels of longitudinal stability. The results are related to current ideas about the cognitive foundations of early reading skills

    Self-reported memory strategies and their relationship to immediate and delayed text recall and working memory capacity

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    The aim of this study was to examine the performance of fifth-grade children in the reproduction of the content of a new text - directly, after they had read it (immediate recall), and one week later (delayed recall) - and to investigate the relationship between performance, self-reported memory strategies, and working memory capacity (WMC). The results revealed that more complex strategies are associated with better performances, and that children with high WMC outperformed children with lower WMC in immediate and delayed text recall tasks. Hierarchical regression analyses showed that memory strategy and WMC are the strongest predictors for both immediate and delayed recall tasks. It is argued that self-reported memory strategies are possible to use as estimates of strategy proficiency. The awareness of the importance of memory strategies and children’s WMC in education are further discussed
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