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The neural and cognitive basis of expository text comprehension

Psychology

The neural and cognitive basis of expository text comprehension

T. A. Keller, R. A. Mason, et al.

Explore how readers' brains respond to expository technical texts: better comprehension engages the left inferior frontal gyrus, left superior parietal lobe, bilateral dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, and hippocampus—regions for mental model building and integrating new and prior knowledge—while poorer comprehension links to ventromedial prefrontal cortex and precuneus involvement. This research was conducted by Timothy A. Keller, Robert A. Mason, Aliza E. Legg, and Marcel Adam Just.... show more
Abstract
As science and technology rapidly progress, it becomes increasingly important to understand how individuals comprehend expository technical texts that explain these advances. This study examined differences in individual readers’ technical comprehension performance and differences among texts, using functional brain imaging to measure regional brain activity while students read passages on technical topics and then took a comprehension test. Better comprehension of the technical passages was related to higher activation in regions of the left inferior frontal gyrus, left superior parietal lobe, bilateral dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, and bilateral hippocampus. These areas are associated with the construction of a mental model of the passage and with the integration of new and prior knowledge in memory. Poorer comprehension of the passages was related to greater activation of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex and the precuneus, areas involved in autobiographical and episodic memory retrieval. More comprehensible passages elicited more brain activation associated with establishing links among different types of information in the text and activation associated with establishing conceptual coherence within the text representation. These findings converge with previous behavioral research in their implications for teaching technical learners to become better comprehenders and for improving the structure of instructional texts, to facilitate scientific and technological comprehension.
Publisher
npj Science of Learning
Published On
Mar 21, 2024
Authors
Timothy A. Keller, Robert A. Mason, Aliza E. Legg, Marcel Adam Just
Tags
Technical comprehension
Functional neuroimaging
Mental model construction
Prior knowledge integration
Left inferior frontal gyrus
Hippocampus
Text coherence
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