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Processing of positive-causal and negative-causal coherence relations in primary school children and adults: a test of the cumulative cognitive complexity approach in German

Authors :
Yvonne Neeb
Maj-Britt Isberner
Sabine Weinert
Tobias Richter
Johannes Naumann
Julia Knoepke
Source :
Journal of child language 44 (2017) 2, S. 297-328
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2016.

Abstract

Establishing local coherence relations is central to text comprehension. Positive-causal coherence relations link a cause and its consequence, whereas negative-causal coherence relations add a contrastive meaning (negation) to the causal link. According to the cumulative cognitive complexity approach, negative-causal coherence relations are cognitively more complex than positive-causal ones. Therefore, they require greater cognitive effort during text comprehension and are acquired later in language development. The present cross-sectional study tested these predictions for German primary school children from Grades 1 to 4 and adults in reading and listening comprehension. Accuracy data in a semantic verification task support the predictions of the cumulative cognitive complexity approach. Negative-causal coherence relations are cognitively more demanding than positive-causal ones. Moreover, our findings indicate that children's comprehension of negative-causal coherence relations continues to develop throughout the course of primary school. Findings are discussed with respect to the generalizability of the cumulative cognitive complexity approach to German.

Details

ISSN :
14697602 and 03050009
Volume :
44
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Child Language
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....06b5febb22450536ab6e9496025e5ada
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/s0305000915000872