| Literature DB >> 25520532 |
Tracy Linderholm1, Morton Ann Gernsbacher2, Paul van den Broek3, Lana Neninde4, Rachel R W Robertson5, Brian Sundermier6.
Abstract
The objective of this study was to determine how readers process narrative texts when the main character has multiple, and changing, goals. Readers must keep track of such goals to understand the causal relations between text events, an important process for comprehension. The structure building framework theory of reading proposes that readers maintain the most relevant goal in focus using the mechanism of suppression. The results of this study confirm that readers maintain the activation of goal information that is rementioned in a text and suppress previous goal information when a new goal is introduced. Thus, in an attempt to understand the causal relations between events in a text, readers keep track of multiple story character goals by using suppression.Year: 2004 PMID: 25520532 PMCID: PMC4266429 DOI: 10.1207/s15326950dp3701_4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Discourse Process ISSN: 0163-853X