Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W3094606682> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W3094606682 abstract "The digital revolution has made a multitude of text documents from highly diverse perspectives on almost any topic easily available. Accordingly, the ability to integrate and evaluate information from different sources, known as multiple document comprehension, has become increasingly important. Because multiple document comprehension requires the integration of content and source information across texts, it is assumed to exceed the demands of single text comprehension due to the inclusion of two additional mental representations: the integrated situation model and the intertext model. To date, there is little empirical evidence on commonalities and differences between single text and multiple document comprehension. Although the relationships between single text and multiple document comprehension can be well distinguished conceptually, there is a lack of empirical studies supporting these assumptions. Therefore, we investigated the dimensional structure of single text and multiple document comprehension with similar test setups. We examined commonalities and differences between the two forms of text comprehension in terms of their relations to final school exam grades, level of university studies and university performance. Using a sample of n = 501 students from two German universities, we jointly modeled single text and multiple document comprehension and applied a series of regression models. Concerning the relationship between single text and multiple document comprehension, confirmatory dimensionality analyses revealed the best fit for a model with two separate factors (latent correlation: 0.84) compared to a two-dimensional model with cross-loadings and fixed covariance between the latent factors and a model with a general factor. Accordingly, the results indicate that single text and multiple document comprehension are separable yet correlated constructs. Furthermore, we found that final school exam grades, level of university studies and prior university performance statistically significant predicted both single text and multiple document comprehension and that expected future university performance was predicted by multiple document comprehension. There were also statistically significant relationships between multiple document comprehension and these variables when single text comprehension was taken into account. The results imply that multiple document comprehension is a construct that is closely related to single text comprehension yet empirically differs from it." @default.
- W3094606682 created "2020-10-29" @default.
- W3094606682 creator A5002124154 @default.
- W3094606682 creator A5005642602 @default.
- W3094606682 creator A5011679572 @default.
- W3094606682 creator A5033141710 @default.
- W3094606682 creator A5052232752 @default.
- W3094606682 creator A5068771789 @default.
- W3094606682 date "2020-10-23" @default.
- W3094606682 modified "2023-10-17" @default.
- W3094606682 title "More Than (Single) Text Comprehension? – On University Students’ Understanding of Multiple Documents" @default.
- W3094606682 cites W1595896561 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W1769877759 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W1966576448 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W1967390364 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W1985762758 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W1990689692 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W1995417229 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2002609874 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2008174516 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2012257031 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2019029873 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2022764020 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2023697782 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2035108889 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2036043848 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2050275790 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2051967237 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2057124853 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2067672186 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2073694723 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2077876912 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2080839266 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2084015864 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2085114967 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2089724969 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2091031147 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2096720202 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2097301153 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2103032444 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2112601319 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2145289962 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2157405565 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2161946407 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2191057119 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2238893117 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2275395708 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2346967877 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2477917057 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2503559904 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2617090957 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2619944231 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2626853004 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2627091584 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2729040250 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2729481542 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2729973099 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2739505485 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2877923312 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2884175104 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2902850704 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2904045754 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2938469578 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2943883979 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2960580493 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W2971098036 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W3005892338 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W3006131642 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W3017890840 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W4230616807 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W4233032930 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W4251744831 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W4252507649 @default.
- W3094606682 cites W4253193649 @default.
- W3094606682 doi "https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.562450" @default.
- W3094606682 hasPubMedCentralId "https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/7644972" @default.
- W3094606682 hasPubMedId "https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33192832" @default.
- W3094606682 hasPublicationYear "2020" @default.
- W3094606682 type Work @default.
- W3094606682 sameAs 3094606682 @default.
- W3094606682 citedByCount "12" @default.
- W3094606682 countsByYear W30946066822021 @default.
- W3094606682 countsByYear W30946066822022 @default.
- W3094606682 countsByYear W30946066822023 @default.
- W3094606682 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W3094606682 hasAuthorship W3094606682A5002124154 @default.
- W3094606682 hasAuthorship W3094606682A5005642602 @default.
- W3094606682 hasAuthorship W3094606682A5011679572 @default.
- W3094606682 hasAuthorship W3094606682A5033141710 @default.
- W3094606682 hasAuthorship W3094606682A5052232752 @default.
- W3094606682 hasAuthorship W3094606682A5068771789 @default.
- W3094606682 hasBestOaLocation W30946066821 @default.
- W3094606682 hasConcept C138885662 @default.
- W3094606682 hasConcept C154945302 @default.
- W3094606682 hasConcept C15744967 @default.
- W3094606682 hasConcept C199360897 @default.
- W3094606682 hasConcept C204321447 @default.
- W3094606682 hasConcept C23123220 @default.
- W3094606682 hasConcept C2778780117 @default.
- W3094606682 hasConcept C41008148 @default.