2002
DOI: 10.1207/s15326950dp3402_2
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Inference Processes: Integrating Relevant Knowledge and Text Information

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Cited by 24 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…These sources of information guide the cognitive activities that underlie comprehension, including (but not limited to) the activation of meaning from long-term memory (e.g., Kintsch, 1998;McNamara & McDaniel, 2004;Rizzella & O'Brien, 2002), the application of prior knowledge to reason about text events and descriptions (Anderson & Pichert, 1978;Bartlett, 1932;Bower, Black, & Turner, 1979;Bransford & Johnson, 1972;Schank & Abelson, 1977), and the validation of unfolding logical arguments on the basis of beliefs about the world (e.g., Halldorson & Singer, 2002;Lea, Mulligan, & Walton, 2005;Singer, Halldorson, Lear, & Andrusiak, 1992). Theoretical views of discourse comprehension detail the contributions of prior knowledge and text content in describing readers' attempts at understanding and remembering what they read (e.g., Long, Wilson, Hurley, & Prat, 2006;.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These sources of information guide the cognitive activities that underlie comprehension, including (but not limited to) the activation of meaning from long-term memory (e.g., Kintsch, 1998;McNamara & McDaniel, 2004;Rizzella & O'Brien, 2002), the application of prior knowledge to reason about text events and descriptions (Anderson & Pichert, 1978;Bartlett, 1932;Bower, Black, & Turner, 1979;Bransford & Johnson, 1972;Schank & Abelson, 1977), and the validation of unfolding logical arguments on the basis of beliefs about the world (e.g., Halldorson & Singer, 2002;Lea, Mulligan, & Walton, 2005;Singer, Halldorson, Lear, & Andrusiak, 1992). Theoretical views of discourse comprehension detail the contributions of prior knowledge and text content in describing readers' attempts at understanding and remembering what they read (e.g., Long, Wilson, Hurley, & Prat, 2006;.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Causal representations are necessary to solve syntactic ambiguities or to comprehend texts by inferring causes and consequences (Halldorson & Singer, 2002;Singer & O'Connell, 2003;Valencia-Laver & Light, 2000;Wiley & Myers, 2003), but the traditional psycholinguistic view of causality in text comprehension does not address whether such representations are exclusively semantic or require sensory-driven representations. That is, traditionally, sensory representations and semantic processing have been assumed independent from each other and located in different cognitive (i.e., cerebral) modules.…”
Section: Causality In Sentence and Text Comprehensionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Perhaps the highest level of causal representation occurs during discourse processing (Halldorson & Singer, 2002;Singer & O'Connell, 2003;Valencia-Laver & Light, 2000;Wiley & Myers, 2003). How does the relation between causal perception and higherorder causal reasoning contribute to causal inference at a discourse level?…”
Section: Conclusion and Further Directionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The act of inferencing is paramount for text comprehension because it makes possible for readers to establish a representation of the meaning of the text in memory on the basis of its coherence relations and the readers' general knowledge (Gernsbacher, 1990(Gernsbacher, , 1997Halldorson & Singer, 2002;Linderholm, 2002;Long, Oppy, & Seely, 1997;Magliano, Trabasso, & Graesser, 1999;Noordmann & Vonk, 1992;Trabasso & Magliano, 1996;van Dijk & Kintsch, 1983). Hence, if readers fail to execute processes that integrate different portions of a text and to make inferences based on their general knowledge to elaborate on the text representation, they may fail to understand the text and have diffi culties in remembering it (Horiba, 2000;Linderholm & van den Broek, 2002;Long et al, 1997;Trabasso & Suh, 1993;Trabasso, Suh, Payton, & Jain, 1995).…”
Section: Inference and Reading Comprehensionmentioning
confidence: 99%