Author/Authors :
Francesca Pazzaglia، نويسنده , , Cristina Toso and Stefano Cacciamani، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Many models have hypothesized that multimedia comprehension requires
the concurrent processing of verbal and visuospatial information by limited
information processing systems. However, in spite of the emphasis devoted to
the concurrent processing of verbal and visuospatial information, little
research has so far investigated the specific role played by verbal and visuospatial
abilities in multimedia comprehension. The present paper aims to
study the specific involvement of verbal and visuospatial working memory in
multimedia learning.
Ninety-two students (39 boys and 53 girls) from a middle school in a small
city in the northeast of Italy, were asked to learn new information on the
physical and social geography of Germany from a hypermedium. Participants
were also required to perform a reading comprehension test, two short-term
memory tasks, and two working memory tasks, which assessed either verbal
or visuospatial memory. The results support the hypothesis that both verbal
and visuospatial working memory sub-components play a role in hypermedium
processing, but with specific and distinct functions: the performance in
the verbal working memory task was able to predict the semantic knowledge
children can derive from hypermedia learning. In contrast, visuospatial
working memory seemed to have lower connections to the semantic knowledge
children derived from a hypermedia document, whereas its role emerged
in the ability to construct a representation of the document structure.