Maury, P., & Teisserenc, A. (2005). The role of connectives in science text comprehension and memory. Language and Cognitive Processes, 20(3), 489-512.
Maury, P.; Teisserenc, A.
2005
Maury, P., & Teisserenc, A. (2005). The role of connectives in science text comprehension and memory. Language and Cognitive Processes, 20(3), 489-512.
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We contrasted four possible views of how causal connectives function during reading short texts: an end-of-clause reactivation view, a connective-elicited inference view, a resource-saving view, and a no-connective stimulating view. In Experiment 1, participants read a series of popular scientific texts joined by because or separated by a full stop. The on-line word-completion task used to measure inference activation revealed that although causal inferences are activated during reading, they are not enhanced by the presence of a connective. In Experiment 2, second-clause reading times data and memory data (prompted delayed recall test) revealed specific patterns of results according to the nature of the relation conveyed by the connective (additive vs. causal). We found evidence that only because gave rise to an immediate presence effect associated with faster end-of clause reading times. This supported the view that because enhanced the on-line integration process rather than the inferential process.
The result of this experiment is consistent with several previous studies. Scientific causal inferences are activated during reading even if the conclusion and the final premise of the passages are not connected with " because" and even if the readers are not encouraged to do so.
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