Post on 02-Jan-2016
Second language readers’ memory
for narrative texts:
The effect of interest and causal reasoning
Yukie Horiba & Keiko Fukaya(Kanda University of International Studies) (St. Luke‘s College of Nursing)
Annual Meeting of the Society for Text & DiscourseChicago, IL. August 16-18, 2010
Research Questions
Q1: Do L2 readers perceive the causal properties of a narrative text (causal chain and causal connectivity)?
Q2: Does their level of interest affect the relevance of content information?
Q3: How do interest and causal reasoning relate to the effect of language proficiency?
Background
1. Text comprehension involves: - the interaction between linguistic processing
and conceptual processing - the construction of a representation of the
text. (Greasser, Gernsbacher, & Goldman, 2003; Kintsch, 1998; van Oostendorp & Goldman, 1999)
2. For a narrative text, an event’s causal-chain status and causal connectivity is important.
(L1: Trabasso, Secco, & van den Broek 1984; L2: Horiba, 1996; Horiba, van den Broek, & Fletcher, 1993)
3. Topic interest influences the relevance of content information, affecting comprehension and memory.
(L1: Alexander, Jetton, & Kulikowich, 1996; Kaakinen & Hyona, 2005; McNamara, 2007; L2: Barry & Lazarte, 1998; Bugel & Buunk, 1996; Chen & Donin, 1997)
4. In L2 reading, level of language proficiency is a critical factor.
(Horiba, 1996; Zwaan & Brown, 1996; Stevensen, Schoonen, & de Glopper, 2003 )
How do topic interest and causal reasoning affect L2 text comprehension?
MethodParticipants : 145 college EFL students in Japan
(70 Nursing majors & 75 Nonnursing majors)
Materials : Two short narrative textsabout a patient’s medical case (425-427 words, 28 sentences, each)
Procedure : Participants read one text and recalled its content
The ‘Decision’ text“Who Decides the Treatment?”
Michael Cantos, a 15-year-old who has recurrent metastatic Ewing sarcoma, has been hospitalized with fever and neutropenia, common complications of his recent chemotherapy. Michael lives with his parents, two younger siblings, and his paternal grandmother. His parents and grandmother were born in the Philippines and emigrated to the United States about 30 years ago; all three of the Cantos children were born in this country. When Michael was first diagnosed, he was told that this type of cancer was aggressive and had already spread from the primary site in his pelvis to his bronchi and parenchyma. Treatment consisted of surgical resection, a year of chemotherapy, and six weeks of radiation. During the past year, whenever Michael asked if the cancer was fatal and what was the mortality rate, the palliative team members have responded both with veracity and reassurance, declaring, ”Some patients die, but we’re all fighting very hard to cure you.” Michael hasn’t � �forgotten a word. On this admission, a routine chest X-ray reveals a large lesion in his right lung. Additional X-rays reveal multiple smaller lung lesions and a large pelvic neoplasm. Just two months earlier his routine surveillance scans were normal. Now, on learning the results of the chest X-ray, Michael asks if his mother can stay overnight in the hospital with him. Michael also tells his parents that he wants to hear his scan results and treatment options at the same time they do. His parents are shocked. They’d prefer withholding such �dismal news from �Michael, but they agree to honor his wishes. This decision deeply upsets Michael’s grandmother, however, and on their next visit Michael says, ”Why does Grandmother always have to pray the rosary over me—doesn’t �she know it doesn’t work? ” � In the team conference, a new registered nurse expresses frustration with the grandmother’s constant �interference ; she says that by praying the rosary over him, the grandmother may be upsetting Michael further. � The nurse says she can’t support the grandmother and the boy at the same time, and asks the team for help. The team decides to meet every two weeks, or more often if necessary. The team also schedules a meeting to discuss Michael’s prognosis and communication within the family. As usual, the patient and his parents are encouraged to bring anyone they want. Michael immediately says that he wants only his parents present, and his parents agree. At the meeting the pediatric oncologist initially presents information, with the palliative care nurse practitioner summarizing or restating important points to ensure that everyone understands. Decisions are made by consensus.
A sample list of events for the ‘Decision’ text(43 events in total) E1 : Michael Cantos, a 15-year-old, E2 : who has recurrent metastatic Ewing sarcoma, E3 : has been hospitalized with fever and neutropenia, E4 : common complications of his recent chemotheraphy.
43
42
4140
39383736
353433
32
31302928
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
2019
18
17
1615
14
13
12
11
10
9
876
5
4
32
1 ∩
∩
∩ ∩
The causal network model for the ‘Decision’ text
A sample list of propositions for the ‘Decision’ text(209 props in total)
S1 *P1: Hospitalize [$ MichaelC] P2: With [P1 P3]*P3: And [fever neutropenia]*P4: REF [P3 complication]*P5: Of [complication chemotherapy]*P6: MOD [complication common]*P7: POSSESS [MichaelC chemotherapy]*P8: TIME [chemotherapy recent] P9: REF [MichaelC 15-year-old] S2 P1: Live [Michael] P2: With [P1 P3] P3: And [parent sibling grandmother] P4: POSSESS [Michael parent] * Health care related proposition
ResultsL2 proficiency and vocabulary
knowledge
Nurse group scored significantly poorer than Nonnurse group on TOEFL (F[1,133] = 25.7; p < .0001) and VLT (F[1,133] = 16.5; p < .0001).
Group nTOEFL VLT
M SD M SD
Nurse 70 65.7 7.6 67.5 15.0
Nonnurse 75 72.1 7.4 77.0 13.1
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
TOEFL VLT
Nurse
Nonnurse
Recall (%) of events and propositions
Nurse group and Nonnurse group recalled similar amount of content information in terms of events (group, F[1,191]=.03, n.s.; text, F[1,191]=11.48, p < .001) and propositions (group, F[1,815] = .32; n.s.; text, F[1.815]=2.38, n.s.).
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
Events Propositions
Nurse
Nonnurse
Group Text n Events Propositions
NurseDecision 33 40.7 25.0
Hope 37 30.8 22.7
NonnurseDecision 37 42.0 24.1
Hope 38 28.6 22.0
Event recall (%) by causal-chain status
nOn Off
M SD M SD
Nurse 70 38.6 25.8 23.2 13.9
Nonnurse 75 38.2 25.5 22.0 14.8
Events of the causal chain were more memorable than dead-ends for each group (Nurse: F[1,96]=7.18, p=.009; Nonnurse: F[1,96]=8.01, p=.006).
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
On-chain(n=75)
Off-chain(n=22)
Nurse
Nonnurse
1 2 3 4 5
Nurse33.0
(24.9)30.5
(23.3)38.7
(25.9)41.6
(20.7)53.2
(25.7)
Nonnurse30.8
(23.1)29.4
(23.1)37.6
(25.6)50.7
(24.3)51.8
(22.0)
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
Nurse
Nonnurse
Event recall (%) by no. of causal connections
Events with more connections were more memorable than events with fewer connections for each group (Nurse: F[1,96]=4.31, p=.04; Nonnurse: F[1,96]=6.75, p=.01).
Proposition recall (%) by type of content
Health-care information was as memorable as general information for Nurse group, but not for Nonnurse group (Nurse: F[1,408]=1.776, p=.18; Nonnurse: F[1,408]= 6.24, p=.01 ).
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
Health-care(n=123)
General(n=286)
Nurse
Nonnurse
nHealth-care General
M SD M SD
Nurse 70 21.8 21.3 24.7 19.8
Nonnurse 75 19.3 18.3 24.7 20.7
Discussion
1. Despite lower level of L2 proficiency, Nurse group recalled texts as well as Nonnurse group.
Nurse group had high interest and engaged in more active processing.
2. For both groups, recall showed sensitivity to the event’s causal-chain status and causal connectivity.
=> They perceived the antecedent-consequence relations between events, constructing text memory accordingly.
3. Nurse group recalled health-care information as well as general information, while Nonnurse group did not.
Nurse group found health-care information “relevant” to their interest and encoded it deeply into text memory.
Nonnurse group did not find it relevant and did not encode it into text memory.
Conclusion1. L2 readers are sensitive to the causal
properties of a narrative text.
2. Topic interest affects L2 text processing and recall.
3. Language proficiency intervenes the effect of causal reasoning and interest on text comprehension.
Thank you.! Send all correspondence to horiba@kanda.kuis.ac.jp
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Acknowledgement : This research was supported in part by grants-in-aid for scientific research B2-15320071 and B2-20320073 from Japan Society for the Promotion of Science.