Gernsbacher Morton Ann, Robertson Rachel R W, Palladino Paola, Werner Necia K
Department of Psychology University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Department of Psychology University of Padova.
Discourse Process. 2004 Apr;37(2):145-164. doi: 10.1207/s15326950dp3702_4.
Three experiments investigated how readers manage their mental representations during narrative comprehension. The first experiment investigated whether readers' access to their mental representations of the main character in a narrative becomes enhanced (producing a "benefit") when the character is rementioned; the first experiment also investigated whether readers' access to the main character in a narrative becomes weakened or interfered with (producing a "cost") when a new character is introduced. The purpose of the second experiment was to ensure that there was nothing unusually salient about the accessibility of names; thus, we assessed readers' access to an object associated with the main character rather than the character's name. Again, readers demonstrated increased accessibility to the main character when it was rementioned in the narrative, and readers demonstrated reduced accessibility to the main character when a new character was introduced. A third experiment compared more-skilled and less-skilled readers' abilities to manage these mental representations during narrative comprehension. Findings were consistent with research suggesting that more-skilled readers are more skilled at attenuating interfering information (i.e., suppression). Data from all 3 experiments suggest that successful narrative comprehension involves managing mental representations of salient and often times interfering characters.
三项实验研究了读者在叙事性文本理解过程中如何管理其心理表征。第一个实验研究了在叙事中再次提及主要人物时,读者对该人物心理表征的提取是否会得到增强(产生“益处”);第一个实验还研究了引入新人物时,读者对叙事中主要人物的提取是否会被削弱或干扰(产生“代价”)。第二个实验的目的是确保名字的可提取性没有什么异常突出之处;因此,我们评估了读者对与主要人物相关的一个物体的提取,而不是对人物名字的提取。同样,当叙事中再次提到主要人物时,读者表现出对其提取能力增强,而引入新人物时,读者对主要人物的提取能力则表现出下降。第三个实验比较了阅读能力较强和较弱的读者在叙事性文本理解过程中管理这些心理表征的能力。研究结果与其他研究一致,表明阅读能力较强的读者在减弱干扰信息(即抑制)方面更有技巧。来自所有三个实验的数据表明,成功的叙事性文本理解涉及管理突出且常常具有干扰性的人物的心理表征。