Article de revue: ID no. (ISBN etc.):  0090-502X Clé de citation BibTeX:  Day2007
Day, S. B., & Gentner, D. (2007). Nonintentional analogical inference in text comprehension. Memory & Cognition, 35(1), pp. 39–49.
Ajoutée par: Sterenn Audo 2008-01-21 15:42:47    Dernièrement modifiée par: Sterenn Audo 2008-01-21 15:47:13
 B  
Catégories: Analogie, Full text, Transfert analogique
Descripteurs: Analogy, Cognitive Processes, INFERENCE, Intention, interpretation, nonintentional analogical inference, READING comprehension, Reading Speed, text comprehension
Auteurs: Day, Gentner
Collection: Memory & Cognition

Nombre de vues:  377
Popularité:  34.18%

 
Résumé
We present findings suggesting that analogical inference processes can play a role in fluent comprehension and interpretation. Participants were found to use information from a prior relationally similar example in understanding the content of a later example, but they reported that they were not aware of having done so. These inference processes were sensitive to structural mappings between the two instances, ruling out explanations based solely on more general kinds of activation, such as priming. Reading speed measures were consistent with the possibility that these inferences had taken place during encoding of the target rather than during the later recognition test. These findings suggest that analogical mapping, though often viewed as an explicit deliberative process, can sometimes operate without intent or even awareness. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2007 APA, all rights reserved)(from the journal abstract)
Ajoutée par: Sterenn Audo

 
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