Abstract:
Just as syntax differentiates coherent sentences from scrambled  word strings, the comprehension of sequential images must also use a  cognitive system to distinguish coherent narrative sequences from random  strings of images. We conducted experiments analogous to two classic  studies of language processing to examine the contributions of narrative  structure and semantic relatedness to processing sequential  images. We compared four types of comic strips: (1) Normal sequences  with both structure and meaning, (2) Semantic Only sequences (in which  the panels were related to a common semantic theme, but had no narrative  structure), (3) Structural Only sequences (narrative structure but no  semantic relatedness), and (4) Scrambled sequences of randomly-ordered  panels. In Experiment 1, participants monitored for target panels in  sequences presented panel-by-panel. Reaction times were slowest to  panels in Scrambled sequences, intermediate in both Structural Only and  Semantic Only sequences, and fastest in Normal sequences. This suggests  that both semantic relatedness and narrative structure offer advantages  to processing. Experiment 2 measured ERPs to all panels across the whole  sequence. The N300/N400 was largest to panels in both the Scrambled and  Structural Only sequences, intermediate in Semantic Only sequences and  smallest in the Normal sequences. This implies that a combination of  narrative structure and semantic relatedness can facilitate semantic  processing of upcoming panels (as reflected by the N300/N400). Also,  panels in the Scrambled sequences evoked a larger left-lateralized  anterior negativity than panels in the Structural Only sequences. This  localized effect was distinct from the N300/N400, and appeared despite  the fact that these two sequence types were matched on local semantic  relatedness between individual panels. These findings suggest that  sequential image comprehension uses a narrative structure that may be  independent of semantic relatedness. Altogether, we argue that the  comprehension of visual narrative is guided by an interaction between  structure and meaning. (Contains 9 figures and 4 tables.)
 CoLiDeS + Pic is a cognitive model of web-navigation that incorporates  semantic information from pictures into CoLiDeS. In our earlier  research, we have demonstrated that by incorporating semantic  information from pictures, CoLiDeS + Pic can predict the hyperlinks on  the shortest path more frequently, and also with greater information  scent, compared to earlier cognitive models of web-navigation like  CoLiDeS that relied only on textual information from hyperlinks. In  this article, we investigate the following research questions. First,  would the increase in information scent have an impact on the actual  user navigation behaviour? Second, do users actually follow the  navigation path predicted by CoLiDeS + Pic? In other words, would  CoLiDeS + Pic predict actual user navigation behaviour more accurately  than CoLiDeS? We investigate these questions by varying the relevance of  pictures on a web page and studying the impact of varying relevance on  the user navigation patterns. We found that under the highly relevant  picture condition, users were more accurate and took less time to finish  their tasks. Also, under the highly relevant picture condition, CoLiDeS  + Pic predicts significantly greater number of actual user clicks.  There was no significant difference in model predictions between the  lowly relevant picture condition and no-picture condition. These results  validate the predictions made by CoLiDeS + Pic. (Contains 5 figures and  3 tables.)
Public-private partnerships in education (ePPP) are acquiring increasing  centrality in the agendas of international organizations and  development agencies dealing with educational affairs. They are designed  as an opportunity to correct inefficiencies in the public delivery of  education and to mobilize new resources to increase the access to and  cost-effectiveness of education in low-income contexts.  This article explores the emergence of ePPP as a "programmatic idea"  and, in particular, the semiotic strategies by means of which this idea  has been located in the global education agenda and promoted  internationally among practice communities by a network of policy  entrepreneurs. The analysis is supported by extensive fieldwork and by a  new approach to the analysis of the framing and mobilization of new  policy ideas, which incorporates literature on agenda setting, policy  entrepreneurs, and policy frame analysis. The approach reveals the  complex way in which policy ideas, political actors, institutions, and  material factors interact to strategically put forward new policy  alternatives in developing contexts. (Contains 1 table, 2 figures, and  17 notes.)
The principles of Hungarian music educator Zoltan Kodaly can be  particularly useful not only in teaching children how to read music  notation but also in creating curiosity and enjoyment for reading music.  Many of Kodaly's ideas pertaining to music literacy have been echoed by  educators such as Jerome Bruner and Edwin Gordon, as well as current  brain researchers. Specifically, Kodaly's emphasis on  sound before sight, going from known to unknown, use of moveable do  solfege, use of various learning modes, and the importance of providing  adequate preparation of pitch concepts can all be useful in our approach  to preparing students to read pitch on the music staff. Various  vertical as well as vertical/horizontal "pre-staff" activities,  including melodic contour, body signs, visual icons, and the solfa tone  ladder help to build children's understanding of pitch placement and  create curiosity for seeing how familiar sounds will look on the staff.  (Contains 4 notes and 7 figures.)
In literature, several processes have been suggested to describe  conceptual changes being undertaken. However, a few parts of studies  analyse in great detail which students' learning processes are involved  in physics classes during teaching, and how they are used. Following a  socio-constructivist approach using tools coming from discourse  analysis, we suggest studying three processes of students'  learning: (1) establishing links between ideas, (2) increasing the  domain of applicability of ideas, or (3) decreasing the domain of  applicability of ideas. Our database consists of video data and written  worksheets of two students at the upper-secondary school level (Grade 10  [15-year-old students]) during a one-month teaching sequence about gas.  Based on semiotic resources contained in oral and written language, we  reconstruct in great detail all the ideas about gas expressed by both  students during the entire teaching sequence. Our analysis deals with  (1) how learning processes are identified based on the ideas expressed  by students, and (2) how the three learning processes are used by the  two students during teaching. Our results show that during the teaching  sequence: (1) the emergence of the networks of three ideas is supported  by networks of two ideas expressed previously by students; (2) both  students express more networks of two ideas than networks of three  ideas; (3) the process "increasing the domain of applicability" of an  idea or a network of ideas is very often involved; and (4) the process  "decreasing the domain of applicability" of an idea or network of ideas  is rarely used by them. (Contains 10 figures, 3 tables, and 3 notes.)
Words with well-known meaning in colloquial language often make up an  educational challenge when introduced as terms with formal scientific  meaning. New connections must be established between the word, already  constrained by existing meaning and reference, and the intended formal  scientific meaning and reference. A two-dimensional semantic/semiotic  analysing schema (acronym 2-D SAS) has been developed  to clarify a given word/term in a structured mode both according to  non-formal senses and referents and formal scientific meaning and  referents. The schema is constructed on ideas from semantics, semiotics  and history and philosophy of science. The approach is supposed to be a  contribution to make a fine-gained analysis of the structure and  dynamics of conceptual change. The role of referents and referent change  in conceptual change is highlighted by analysing the character of the  recurrent mix-up of the terms heat and temperature among students at  different educational levels.
False memories created by the Deese/Roediger-McDermott (DRM) procedure  typically show a developmental reversal whereby levels of false recall  increase with age. In contrast, false memories produced by phonological  lists have been shown to decrease as age increases. In the current study  we show that phonological false memories, like semantic false memories  produced by the DRM procedure, show a developmental  reversal when list items converge on a single critical lure. In  addition, effects of list length were observed in adults and older  children but not in the younger children, again mirroring effects  previously observed in semantic false memories. These findings suggest  that differences in list structure underlie the divergent developmental  trajectories previously reported in semantic and phonological false  memories. The findings are discussed in relation to theories of false  memory and theories of spoken word recognition. (Contains 2 figures and 2  tables.)
The effects of word predictability and shared semantic similarity  between a target word and other words that could have taken its place in  a sentence on language comprehension are investigated using data from a  reading time study, a sentence completion study, and linear  mixed-effects regression modeling. We find that processing is  facilitated if the different possible words that could occur in a given  context are semantically similar to each other, meaning that processing  is affected not only by the nature of the words that do occur, but also  the relationships between the words that do occur and those that could  have occurred. We discuss possible causes of the semantic similarity  effect and point to possible limitations of using probability as a model  of cognitive effort. (Contains 2 figures and 1 table.)
Background: Structural language anomalies or impairments in autistic  spectrum disorder (ASD) are theoretically and practically important,  although underrecognised as such. This review aims to highlight the  ubiquitousness of structural language anomalies and impairments in ASD,  and to stimulate investigation of their immediate causes and  implications for intervention. Method: Studies of structural  language in ASD are reviewed (based on a search of the literature and  selected as meeting defined inclusion criteria), and explanatory  hypotheses are discussed. Results: Some individuals with ASD never  acquire language. Amongst those who do, language abilities range from  clinically normal (ALN) to various degrees of impairment (ALI).  Developmental trajectories and individual profiles are diverse, and  minority subgroups have been identified. Specifically: language is  commonly but not always delayed and delayed early language is always  characterised by impaired comprehension and odd utterances, and  sometimes by deviant articulation and grammar. -Nevertheless, by school  age an "ASD-typical" language profile emerges from group studies, with  articulation and syntax least affected, and comprehension, semantics and  certain facets of morphology most affected. Thus, even individuals with  ALN have poor comprehension relative to expressive language; also  semantic-processing anomalies and idiosyncratic word usage. It is argued  that impaired socio-emotional-communicative relating, atypical  sensory-perceptual processing, and uneven memory/learning abilities may  underlie shared language anomalies across the spectrum; and that varying  combinations of low nonverbal intelligence, semantic memory impairment  and comorbidities including specific language impairment (SLI), hearing  impairment, and certain medical syndromes underlie ALI and variation in  individual profiles. Conclusions: Structural language is universally  affected in ASD, due to a complex of shared and unshared causal factors.  There is an urgent need for more research especially into the  characteristics and causes of clinically significant language  impairments       
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