Publication | Closed Access
How Much Knowledge Is Too Little? When a Lack of Knowledge Becomes a Barrier to Comprehension
86
Citations
20
References
2019
Year
Knowledge BecomesText StructureSemantic ProcessingEducationCognitionPsycholinguisticsConceptual Knowledge AcquisitionLanguage LearningLanguage ProcessingContent Area LiteracyReading ComprehensionCognitive DevelopmentLanguage AcquisitionReadingSpecific TopicLanguage StudiesLearning ProblemBroken-line RegressionCognitive ScienceKnowledge ThresholdReasoningLearning TheoryKnowledge ReasoningEpistemologyKnowledge ManagementLanguage ComprehensionReading Comprehension StrategiesLinguistics
Have you ever found it difficult to read something because you lack knowledge on the topic? We investigated this phenomenon with a sample of 3,534 high school students who took a background-knowledge test before working on a reading-comprehension test on the topic of ecology. Broken-line regression revealed a knowledge threshold: Below the threshold, the relationship between comprehension and knowledge was weak (β = 0.18), but above the threshold, a strong and positive relation emerged (β = 0.81). Further analyses indicated that certain topically relevant words (e.g., ecosystem, habitat) were more important to know than others when predicting the threshold, and these keywords could be identified using natural-language-processing techniques. Collectively, these results may help identify who is likely to have a problem comprehending information on a specific topic and, to some extent, what knowledge is likely required to comprehend information on that topic.
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