Does generation benefit learning for narrative and expository texts? A direct replication attempt

IF 2.1 3区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, EXPERIMENTAL Applied Cognitive Psychology Pub Date : 2024-07-27 DOI:10.1002/acp.4230
Julia Schindler, Tobias Richter, Raymond A. Mar
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Abstract

Generated information is better recognized and recalled than information that is read. This generation effect has been replicated several times for different types of material, including texts. Perhaps the most influential demonstration is by McDaniel, Einstein, Dunay, and Cobb (Journal of Memory and Language, 1986, 25(6), 645–656; henceforth MEDC). This group tested whether the generation effect occurs only if the generation task stimulates cognitive processes not already stimulated by the text. Numerous studies, however, report difficulties replicating this text by generation-task interaction, which suggests that the effect might only be found under conditions closer to the original method of MEDC. To test this assumption, the present study closely replicated MEDC's Experiment 2 in two separate German and English-speaking samples. The present study provided partial evidence in favor of the expected interaction, which ultimately depended on successful completion of the generation task (with near-to-perfect accuracy). Moreover, it indicates that sentence unscrambling might enhance learning across genres.

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生成是否有利于叙述性和说明性文本的学习?直接复制尝试
生成的信息比阅读的信息更容易识别和记忆。这种生成效应在不同类型的材料(包括文本)中被多次复制。最有影响力的论证可能是麦克丹尼尔、爱因斯坦、杜内和科布(《记忆与语言杂志》,1986 年,25(6),645-656;以下简称 MEDC)。该小组测试了是否只有在生成任务刺激了文本尚未刺激的认知过程时,才会出现生成效应。然而,许多研究报告称,这种文本与生成任务之间的互动难以复制,这表明只有在更接近 MEDC 原始方法的条件下,才可能发现这种效应。为了验证这一假设,本研究在两个不同的德语和英语样本中密切复制了 MEDC 的实验 2。本研究提供了部分证据支持预期的交互作用,而这种交互作用最终取决于成功完成生成任务(接近完美的准确性)。此外,本研究还表明,句子拆分可能会促进跨体裁的学习。
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来源期刊
Applied Cognitive Psychology
Applied Cognitive Psychology PSYCHOLOGY, EXPERIMENTAL-
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
8.30%
发文量
111
期刊介绍: Applied Cognitive Psychology seeks to publish the best papers dealing with psychological analyses of memory, learning, thinking, problem solving, language, and consciousness as they occur in the real world. Applied Cognitive Psychology will publish papers on a wide variety of issues and from diverse theoretical perspectives. The journal focuses on studies of human performance and basic cognitive skills in everyday environments including, but not restricted to, studies of eyewitness memory, autobiographical memory, spatial cognition, skill training, expertise and skilled behaviour. Articles will normally combine realistic investigations of real world events with appropriate theoretical analyses and proper appraisal of practical implications.
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