1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910790235003321

Titolo

Past, present, and future contributions of cognitive writing research to cognitive psychology / / editor, Virginia Berninger

Pubbl/distr/stampa

New York : , : Psychology Press, , 2012

ISBN

1-136-64721-X

1-280-66261-1

9786613639547

1-136-64722-8

0-203-80531-3

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (653 p.)

Altri autori (Persone)

BerningerVirginia Wise

Disciplina

153

Soggetti

Cognitive psychology

Writing - Psychological aspects

Research - Psychological aspects

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Description based upon print version of record.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

Cover; Past, Present, and Future Contributions of Cognitive Writing Research to Cognitive Psychology; Copyright; Contents; Preface; Editor; Contributors; Introduction; Part I: The Cognitive Tradition in Writing Research; 1 My Past and Present as Writing Researcher and Thoughts About the Future of Writing Research; 2 Cognitive Processes of Children and Adults in Translating Thought Into Written Language in Real Time: Perspectives From 30 Years of Programmatic Cognitive Psychology and Linguistics Research; 3 Teacher-Based Writing Research

Part II: The Sociocultural Plus Cognitive Traditions in Writing Research4 Writing, Cognition, and Affect From the Perspectives of Sociocultural and Historical Studies of Writing; 5 Writing Under the Influence (of the Writing Process); 6 Distributed Cognition as a Framework for Understanding Writing; 7 Female Superiority and Gender Similarity Effects and Interest Factors in Writing; Part III: The Changing Nature of Teaching, Learning, and Assessing Writing Across the Life Span: K-12, Adolescence, Higher Education, and the Work World

8 The Role of Strategies, Knowledge, Will, and Skills in a 30-Year



Program of Writing Research (With Homage to Hayes, Fayol, and Boscolo)9 Phonological, Orthographic, and Morphological Word-Level Skills Supporting Multiple Levels of the Writing Process; 10 Children Challenged by Writing Due to Language and Motor Difficulties; 11 The Ordeal of Deliberate Choice: Metalinguistic Development in Secondary Writers; 12 What We Know About Expertise in Professional Communication; Part IV: Levels of Language Processes in Writing: Word, Sentence, and Text

13 Translating Nonverbal Pictures Into Verbal Word Names: Understanding Lexical Access and Retrieval14 Why Should We Take Graphotactic and Morphological Regularities Into Account When Examining Spelling Acquisition?; 15 Toward a Redefinition of Spelling in Shallow Orthographies: Phonological, Lexical, and Grammatical Skills in Learning to Spell Italian; 16 Effects of Handwriting Skill, Output Modes, and Gender on Fourth Graders' Pauses, Language Bursts, Fluency, and Quality; 17 Written Production of Single Words and Simple Sentences; 18 Information Flow Across Modalities and Text Types

Part V: Cognitive Processes in Writing19 Eye-Tracking Data During Written Recall: Clues to Subject-Verb Agreement Processing During Translation; 20 Evaluation and Revision; 21 Working Memory in Writing; Part VI: Applications of Technology to Studying and Teaching Writing; 22 Logging Tools to Study Digital Writing Processes; Part VII: Emerging Cognitive Neuroscience of Writing; 23 The Writing Brain: Coordinating Sensory/Motor, Language, and Cognitive Systems in Working Memory

Visions of the Future of Writing Research: Perspectives From the New Generation of Writing Researchers and Contemporary Leaders

Sommario/riassunto

This volume tells the story of research on the cognitive processes of writing-from the perspectives of the early pioneers, the contemporary contributors, and visions of the future for the field.Writing processes yield important insights into human cognition, and is increasingly becoming a mainstream topic of investigation in cognitive psychology and cognitive neuroscience. Technological advances have made it possible to study cognitive writing processes as writing unfolds in real time. This book provides an introduction to these technologies. The first part of the volume provi