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Duffy,T.;Kabance, P. | 1982
A readable writing approach to text revision was evaluated in 5 experiments with 1,169 17-20 yr old males. Revision involved use of word lists and the application of a syntax rule. It resulted in a reduction of 6 grade levels in the readability score. The revisions failed to produce practical improvements in comprehension on several reading-to-do tasks. Meaningful improvements in comprehension were achieved only for low-ability readers on a reading-to-learn task when vocabulary was simplified. Results are interpreted in terms of cognitive-processing requirements. The inadequacies of readability formulas and guidelines as a means of controlling the production of text are ...
Duffy,T.;Kabance, P. | 1982
A readable writing approach to text revision was evaluated in 5 experiments with 1,169 17-20 yr old males. Revision involved use of word lists and the application of a syntax rule. It resulted in a reduction of 6 grade levels in the readability score. The revisions failed to produce practical improvements in comprehension on several reading-to-do tasks. Meaningful improvements in comprehension were achieved only for low-ability readers on a reading-to-learn task when vocabulary was simplified. Results are interpreted in terms of cognitive-processing requirements. The inadequacies of readability formulas and guidelines as a means of controlling the production of text are ...
Duffy,T.;Kabance, P. | 1982
A readable writing approach to text revision was evaluated in 5 experiments with 1,169 17-20 yr old males. Revision involved use of word lists and the application of a syntax rule. It resulted in a reduction of 6 grade levels in the readability score. The revisions failed to produce practical improvements in comprehension on several reading-to-do tasks. Meaningful improvements in comprehension were achieved only for low-ability readers on a reading-to-learn task when vocabulary was simplified. Results are interpreted in terms of cognitive-processing requirements. The inadequacies of readability formulas and guidelines as a means of controlling the production of text are ...
Eastwood, J.;Snook, B.;Chaulk, S. | 2010
The reading complexity and listening comprehension of Canadian police cautions were measured. In Study 1, the complexity of 44 unique Canadian police cautions was assessed using five readability measures (Flesch-Kincaid reading level, sentence complexity, use of difficult words, use of infrequent words, and number of words). Results showed that 7 (37%) of the right-to-silence cautions (n = 19) and none of the right-to-legal-counsel cautions (n = 25) reached acceptable cutoff levels for all five measures. In Study 2, university students ( N = 121) were presented with one of three cautions verbally and were asked to explain its meaning. Despite ...
Ehrlich, M. | 1991
The cognitive operations involved in the processing of surface-cohesion devices for the construction of a coherent mental representation is a major issue in text comprehension. An experiment was carried out with two narratives presented in two versions: a high-cohesion version and a low-cohesion version derived from the high version with the use of several devices, two anaphoric markers, changes in the temporal connective and word order, omission of the thematic sentence - without modification of the text content. The subjects read and immediately recalled a high-cohesion text and a low-cohesion text. The results showed that lowering cohesion produced an ...
Fraser, L.;Locatis, C. | 2001
The effects of link annotations on user search performance in hypertext environments having deep (layered) and shallow link structures were investigated in this study. Four environments were tested - layered-annotated, layered-unannotated, shallow-annotated, and shallow-unannotated. A single document was divided into 48 sections, and layered and unlayered versions were created. Additional versions were created by adding annotations to the links in the layered and unlayered versions. Subjects were given three queries of varying difficulty and then asked to find the answers to the queries that were contained within the hypertext environment to which they were randomly assigned. Correspondence between the wording ...
Friedman, C.; Romeo, D.; Smith Hinton, S. | 1997
This study was designed to determine whether randomly selected subjects could comprehend prototype consumer-oriented package labeling and inserts for over-the-counter cholestyramine, a nonsystemic lipid-lowering agent. The primary messages communicated in the label were that consumers should see their doctor before taking cholestyramine and should read the full package insert. In addition, the label communicated indication, dosage, and preparation, as well as key warnings about use with other medications. The insert reinforced the message about seeing the doctor before taking cholestyramine and before taking concurrent medications, further explained the purpose of the drug and its correct use, and provided information about ...
Furnham, A.;Gunter, B.;Green, A. | 1990
Two studies are reported on the recall of scientific factual material as a function of the medium or channel of communication through which it was presented. Programmatic research by authors of this paper using widely different stimulus materials on different subject samples has indicated that, compared to information received through audiovisual or audio-only channels, stimulus material received through print is best remembered. In the first study subjects either saw part of an actual television science programme in the audiovisual medium, heard it in the audio-only medium or read a transcript in the print medium. As predicted, subjects who read the ...
Furnham, A.;Gunter, B.;Green, A. | 1990
Two studies are reported on the recall of scientific factual material as a function of the medium or channel of communication through which it was presented. Programmatic research by authors of this paper using widely different stimulus materials on different subject samples has indicated that, compared to information received through audiovisual or audio-only channels, stimulus material received through print is best remembered. In the first study subjects either saw part of an actual television science programme in the audiovisual medium, heard it in the audio-only medium or read a transcript in the print medium. As predicted, subjects who read the ...
Gilabert,R. ;Martinez, G.;Vidal-Abarca, E. | 2005
This paper presents two experiments testing whether an approach to revise a text that fosters the reader's active processing benefits both high and low-knowledge readers. A history text and two alternative revised versions, one fostering the reader's inferential activity and the other reducing it, were employed. Junior high school students with low and high background knowledge about information related to the text topic participated in experiment 1, whereas undergraduate students with low and high knowledge on both the text topic and related information participated in experiment 2. One-third of the students for each condition in both experiments read either the ...
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