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Lorch, R.; Chen, H.; Lemarié, J. | 2012
Two experiments tested the effects of preview sentences and headings on the quality of college students' outlines of informational texts. Experiment 1 found that performance was much better in the preview sentences condition than in a no-signals condition for both printed text and text-to-speech (TTS) audio rendering of the printed text. In contrast, performance in the headings condition was good for the printed text but poor for the auditory presentation because the TTS software failed to communicate nonverbal information carried by the visual headings. Experiment 2 compared outlining performance for five headings conditions during TTS presentation. Using a theoretical framework, ...

Lorch, R.; Lemarié, J.; Chen, H. | 2013
Two experiments compared the effects on text processing of headings and preview sentences that were designed to communicate the same information about the texts’ topics and their organization. In Experiment 1, college students read a text for understanding then were tested on memory for the subtopics and memory for simple facts presented in the text. Memory for subtopics was better for the text with headings; there was no difference between headings and preview sentences on memory for facts. In Experiment 2, participants read a text in order to outline it. Outlining was better if the text contained signals to topic ...

Lorch, R.; Lemarié, J.; Chen, H. | 2013
Two experiments compared the effects on text processing of headings and preview sentences that were designed to communicate the same information about the texts’ topics and their organization. In Experiment 1, college students read a text for understanding then were tested on memory for the subtopics and memory for simple facts presented in the text. Memory for subtopics was better for the text with headings; there was no difference between headings and preview sentences on memory for facts. In Experiment 2, participants read a text in order to outline it. Outlining was better if the text contained signals to topic ...

Lowder, M.; Gordon, P. | 2014
Previous work has suggested that syntactically complex object-extracted relative clauses are easier to process when the head noun phrase (NP1) is inanimate and the embedded noun phrase (NP2) is animate, as compared with the reverse animacy configuration, with differences in processing difficulty beginning as early as NP2 (e.g., The article that the senator . . . vs. The senator that the article . . .). Two eye-tracking-while-reading experiments were conducted to better understand the source of this effect. Experiment 1 showed that having an inanimate NP1 facilitated processing even when NP2 was held constant. Experiment 2 manipulated both animacy of ...

Lowder, M.; Gordon, P. | 2015
Two eye-tracking experiments examined the effects of sentence structure on the processing of complement coercion, in which an event-selecting verb combines with a complement that represents an entity (e.g., began the memo). Previous work has demonstrated that these expressions impose a processing cost, which has been attributed to the need to type-shift the entity into an event in order for the sentence to be interpretable (e.g., began writing the memo). Both experiments showed that the magnitude of the coercion cost was reduced when the verb and complement appeared in separate clauses (e.g., The memo that was begun by the secretary; ...

Pander Maat, H. | 2011
This article reports on four studies into the use and comprehension of mortgage information. The first study finds that consumers are generally unable to find and comprehend information in mortgage information packs. The second study shows that large-scale revisions of the mortgage offer and terms and conditions improve performance on some passages, while worsening problems in others. A third study demonstrates how adjusting headings to the text below may solve problems with finding information. The fourth study shows that warning information in "attention" boxes is often not found and that if it is used, takes more time to process than ...

Pander Maat, H. | 2011
comprehension of mortgage information. The first study finds that consumers are generally unable to find and comprehend information in mortgage information packs. The second study shows that large-scale revisions of the mortgage offer and terms and conditions improve performance on some passages, while worsening problems in others. A third study demonstrates how adjusting headings to the text below may solve problems with finding information. The fourth study shows that warning information in "attention" boxes is often not found and that if it is used, takes more time to process than integrated information. ...

Pander Maat, H. | 2011
This article reports on four studies into the use and comprehension of mortgage information. The first study finds that consumers are generally unable to find and comprehend information in mortgage information packs. The second study shows that large-scale revisions of the mortgage offer and terms and conditions improve performance on some passages, while worsening problems in others. A third study demonstrates how adjusting headings to the text below may solve problems with finding information. The fourth study shows that warning information in "attention" boxes is often not found and that if it is used, takes more time to process than ...

Pander Maat, H.; Lentz, L.; Raynor, D. | 2015
The structure of patient information leaflets (PILs) supplied with medicines in the European Union is largely determined by a regulatory template, requiring a fixed sequence of pre-formulated headings and sub-headings. The template has been criticized on various occasions, but it has never been tested with users. This paper proposes an alternative template, informed by templates used in the USA and Australia, and by previous user testing.The main research question is whether the revision better enables users to find relevant information. Besides, the paper proposes a methodology for testing templates. Testing document templates is complex, as they are “empty”. For both ...

Mangen, A.; Walgermo, B.; Brønnick, K. | 2013
Objective: To explore effects of the technological interface on reading comprehension in a Norwegian school context. Participants: 72 tenth graders from two different primary schools in Norway. Method: The students were randomized into two groups, where the first group read two texts (1400–2000 words) in print, and the other group read the same texts as PDF on a computer screen. In addition pretests in reading comprehension, word reading and vocabulary were administered. A multiple regression analysis was carried out to investigate to what extent reading modality would influence the students’ scores on the reading comprehension measure. Findings: Main findings show ...

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