TY - GEN
T1 - The effects of domain general and health knowledge in processing general and health texts among older adults with hypertension
AU - Chin, Jessie
AU - Stine-Morrow, Elizabeth A.L.
AU - Morrow, Dan
AU - Gao, Xuefei
AU - Conner-Garcia, Thembi
AU - Graumlich, James F.
AU - Murray, Michael D.
PY - 2011
Y1 - 2011
N2 - While there is much evidence that health knowledge supports understanding of health texts, little is known about the processing mechanisms underlying this effect. We used the moving window paradigm to examine attentional allocation to reading health and domain-general texts among older adults with hypertension who varied in verbal ability (general knowledge) and health knowledge. More knowledgeable readers allocated less time to word-level processing and more to conceptual integration. Domain knowledge further engendered earlier conceptual integration in the health texts, as measured by differential allocation to intrasentence integration but less at the end of the sentence compared to less knowledgeable readers. This suggests that knowledge gave readers a head start in building a textbase representation of the ideas conveyed by the sentence. Thus, knowledge helped structure comprehension by supporting conceptual integration. Implications for the design of patients' education materials are discussed.
AB - While there is much evidence that health knowledge supports understanding of health texts, little is known about the processing mechanisms underlying this effect. We used the moving window paradigm to examine attentional allocation to reading health and domain-general texts among older adults with hypertension who varied in verbal ability (general knowledge) and health knowledge. More knowledgeable readers allocated less time to word-level processing and more to conceptual integration. Domain knowledge further engendered earlier conceptual integration in the health texts, as measured by differential allocation to intrasentence integration but less at the end of the sentence compared to less knowledgeable readers. This suggests that knowledge gave readers a head start in building a textbase representation of the ideas conveyed by the sentence. Thus, knowledge helped structure comprehension by supporting conceptual integration. Implications for the design of patients' education materials are discussed.
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M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:81855184662
SN - 9780945289395
T3 - Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society
SP - 147
EP - 151
BT - Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society 55th Annual Meeting, HFES 2011
PB - Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Inc.
T2 - 55th Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting, HFES 2011
Y2 - 19 September 2011 through 23 September 2011
ER -