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For whom is a picture worth a thousand words? Extensions of a dual-coding theory of multimedia learning.
1.1K
Citations
29
References
1994
Year
Multimedia AnalysisCognitionPsycholinguisticsDual-coding TheoryLanguage LearningPsychologySocial SciencesMultimedia LearningSecond Language AcquisitionVisual LanguageLanguage AcquisitionCognitive DevelopmentLanguage StudiesSpatial ReasoningCognitive ScienceCognitive StudyLearning SciencesConcurrent GroupLow-spatial Ability StudentsEmbodied CognitionLearning ObjectSpatial AbilityInteractive MultimediaLearning TheorySpatial CognitionThousand Words
In 2 experiments, high- and low-spatial ability students viewed a computer-gener ated animation and listened simultaneously (concurrent group) or successively (successive group) to a narration that explained the workings either of a bicycle tire pump (Experiment 1) or of the human respiratory system (Experiment 2). The concurrent group generated more creative solutions to subsequent transfer problems than did the successive group; this contiguity effect was strong for high- but not for low-spatial ability students. Consistent with a dual-coding theory, spatial ability allows high-spatial learners to devote more cognitive resources to building referential connections between visual and verbal representations of the presented material, whereas low-spatial ability learners must devote more cognitive resources to building representation connections between visually presented material and its visual representation.
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