Age Differences in Resource Allocation During Reading
阅读资源分配的年龄差异
基本信息
- 批准号:6574143
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 22.02万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:美国
- 项目类别:
- 财政年份:1996
- 资助国家:美国
- 起止时间:1996-09-01 至 2008-02-28
- 项目状态:已结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:
项目摘要
DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Throughout the life span, reading is a requisite skill for performing work, attending to personal needs, and participating in society on a number of levels from filing tax returns to helping children navigate through an educational system to maintaining correspondence. In addition, reading enables entry into new worlds allowing continued growth of the self. Not only is the current cohort of older adults disproportionately disadvantaged in literacy skills, but also age-graded changes in processing capacity make some aspects of reading more difficult. This proposal is a request for a continuation of our project examining adult age differences in resource allocation during reading and the impact of these differences on subsequent comprehension and memory performance. We build on our earlier work by integrating our resource allocation approach with the literature on (cognitive and affective) self-regulation, so as to consider the implications of age-graded reductions in processing capacity, increased reliance on knowledge, and increased role of social and emotional goals for reading. A theoretical framework is developed in which self regulation in reading is conceptualized as arising from a set of negative feedback loops functioning in the context of goals and knowledge of the individual reader. An adult developmental model is adopted in which aging is assumed to engender decreases in fluid ability (reducing the efficiency of language computations), increases in crystallized knowledge (thereby increasing reliance on preexisting knowledge), and a shift in goals which give relatively more weight to social-emotional goals relative to cognitive ones. Within this cognitive developmental framework, we propose a series of experiments that explore the conditions under which self-regulation in reading is compromised by resource demands and when it may be used in a compensatory fashion. We specifically explore how self-regulation in reading is affected by (1) challenges created by illegible orthography, complex syntax, and informational density (Series I, II, & III), (2) the availability of background knowledge (Series IV), and (3) social and affective goals (Series V).
描述(由申请人提供):在人的一生中,阅读是完成工作、满足个人需求和参与社会的必要技能,从报税到帮助孩子在教育系统中导航,再到保持通信。此外,阅读使进入新的世界允许自我持续增长。目前的老年人不仅在读写技能上处于不成比例的劣势,而且处理能力的年龄变化也使阅读的某些方面变得更加困难。这个建议是对我们研究成人在阅读过程中资源分配差异以及这些差异对随后的理解和记忆表现的影响的项目的延续的请求。我们在早期工作的基础上,将资源分配方法与(认知和情感)自我调节的文献相结合,从而考虑处理能力随年龄增长而降低的影响,对知识的依赖增加,以及社交和情感目标对阅读的作用增加。本文发展了一个理论框架,其中阅读中的自我调节被概念化为在个体读者的目标和知识背景下产生的一系列负反馈循环。采用了一种成人发展模型,其中假设衰老会导致流体能力下降(降低语言计算的效率),结晶知识增加(从而增加对先前存在的知识的依赖),以及目标的转变,相对于认知目标而言,社会情感目标相对更重要。在这个认知发展框架内,我们提出了一系列实验来探索阅读中的自我调节受到资源需求损害的条件,以及它何时可能以补偿方式使用。我们特别探讨了阅读中的自我调节如何受到以下因素的影响:(1)难以辨认的正字法、复杂的语法和信息密度(系列1、系列2和系列3);(2)背景知识的可用性(系列4);(3)社会和情感目标(系列5)。
项目成果
期刊论文数量(0)
专著数量(0)
科研奖励数量(0)
会议论文数量(0)
专利数量(0)
数据更新时间:{{ journalArticles.updateTime }}
{{
item.title }}
{{ item.translation_title }}
- DOI:
{{ item.doi }} - 发表时间:
{{ item.publish_year }} - 期刊:
- 影响因子:{{ item.factor }}
- 作者:
{{ item.authors }} - 通讯作者:
{{ item.author }}
数据更新时间:{{ journalArticles.updateTime }}
{{ item.title }}
- 作者:
{{ item.author }}
数据更新时间:{{ monograph.updateTime }}
{{ item.title }}
- 作者:
{{ item.author }}
数据更新时间:{{ sciAawards.updateTime }}
{{ item.title }}
- 作者:
{{ item.author }}
数据更新时间:{{ conferencePapers.updateTime }}
{{ item.title }}
- 作者:
{{ item.author }}
数据更新时间:{{ patent.updateTime }}
ELIZABETH A L STINE-MORROW其他文献
ELIZABETH A L STINE-MORROW的其他文献
{{
item.title }}
{{ item.translation_title }}
- DOI:
{{ item.doi }} - 发表时间:
{{ item.publish_year }} - 期刊:
- 影响因子:{{ item.factor }}
- 作者:
{{ item.authors }} - 通讯作者:
{{ item.author }}
{{ truncateString('ELIZABETH A L STINE-MORROW', 18)}}的其他基金
Cognitive Enrichment and Aging: An Ecological Framework
认知丰富和衰老:生态框架
- 批准号:
9781557 - 财政年份:2018
- 资助金额:
$ 22.02万 - 项目类别:
The Senior Odyssey: A Test of the Engagement Hypothesis of Cognitive Aging
高级奥德赛:认知老化参与假说的检验
- 批准号:
7304599 - 财政年份:2007
- 资助金额:
$ 22.02万 - 项目类别:
The Senior Odyssey: A Test of the Engagement Hypothesis of Cognitive Aging
高级奥德赛:认知老化参与假说的检验
- 批准号:
7495529 - 财政年份:2007
- 资助金额:
$ 22.02万 - 项目类别:
The Senior Odyssey: A Test of the Engagement Hypothesis of Cognitive Aging
高级奥德赛:认知老化参与假说的检验
- 批准号:
7666095 - 财政年份:2007
- 资助金额:
$ 22.02万 - 项目类别:
The Senior Odyssey: A Test of the Engagement Hypothesis of Cognitive Aging
高级奥德赛:认知老化参与假说的检验
- 批准号:
8131634 - 财政年份:2007
- 资助金额:
$ 22.02万 - 项目类别:
The Senior Odyssey: A Test of the Engagement Hypothesis of Cognitive Aging
高级奥德赛:认知老化参与假说的检验
- 批准号:
7916610 - 财政年份:2007
- 资助金额:
$ 22.02万 - 项目类别:
The Senior Odyssey: A Lab-to-Life Translation
高级奥德赛:实验室到生活的转化
- 批准号:
6828729 - 财政年份:2004
- 资助金额:
$ 22.02万 - 项目类别:
The Senior Odyssey: A Lab-to-Life Translation
高级奥德赛:实验室到生活的转化
- 批准号:
6942648 - 财政年份:2004
- 资助金额:
$ 22.02万 - 项目类别:
Age Differences in Resource Allocation During Reading
阅读资源分配的年龄差异
- 批准号:
7023851 - 财政年份:1996
- 资助金额:
$ 22.02万 - 项目类别:
AGE DIFFERENCES IN RESOURCE ALLOCATION DURING READING
阅读过程中资源分配的年龄差异
- 批准号:
2442334 - 财政年份:1996
- 资助金额:
$ 22.02万 - 项目类别:
相似海外基金
Sex and age difference in the immune response to viral myocarditis
病毒性心肌炎免疫反应的性别和年龄差异
- 批准号:
440151 - 财政年份:2020
- 资助金额:
$ 22.02万 - 项目类别:
Studentship Programs
An fMRI study of the effect of age difference on mind attribution
年龄差异对心理归因影响的功能磁共振成像研究
- 批准号:
19J12925 - 财政年份:2019
- 资助金额:
$ 22.02万 - 项目类别:
Grant-in-Aid for JSPS Fellows
Effects of traumatic brain injury on hippocampal network activity: age difference
创伤性脑损伤对海马网络活动的影响:年龄差异
- 批准号:
8443632 - 财政年份:2013
- 资助金额:
$ 22.02万 - 项目类别:
Effects of traumatic brain injury on hippocampal network activity: age difference
创伤性脑损伤对海马网络活动的影响:年龄差异
- 批准号:
8669899 - 财政年份:2013
- 资助金额:
$ 22.02万 - 项目类别:
Subsurface water mass variations in the Kuroshio region inferred from 14C age difference of planktic foraminifers with different depth habitat
不同深度栖息地浮游有孔虫14C年龄差异推断黑潮地区地下水质量变化
- 批准号:
22654061 - 财政年份:2010
- 资助金额:
$ 22.02万 - 项目类别:
Grant-in-Aid for Challenging Exploratory Research
AGE DIFFERENCE IN ATTENTION--CONSEQUENCES FOR MEMORY
注意力的年龄差异——对记忆力的影响
- 批准号:
3453621 - 财政年份:1992
- 资助金额:
$ 22.02万 - 项目类别:
AGE DIFFERENCE IN ATTENTION--CONSEQUENCES FOR MEMORY
注意力的年龄差异——对记忆力的影响
- 批准号:
2051816 - 财政年份:1992
- 资助金额:
$ 22.02万 - 项目类别:
AGE DIFFERENCE IN ATTENTION--CONSEQUENCES FOR MEMORY
注意力的年龄差异——对记忆力的影响
- 批准号:
2051814 - 财政年份:1992
- 资助金额:
$ 22.02万 - 项目类别:
AGE DIFFERENCE IN ATTENTION--CONSEQUENCES FOR MEMORY
注意力的年龄差异——对记忆力的影响
- 批准号:
3453620 - 财政年份:1992
- 资助金额:
$ 22.02万 - 项目类别: