Title: Categories of Cohesion 1
1Categories of Cohesion 1
- Category Example
-
- Reference
- Pronominal The woman lost track of her little
boy - at the mall. She became very worried.
-
- Demonstrative That was the worst exam I had
all term. - Comparative It's the same band we heard last
week. -
- Substitution My computer is too slow. I need to
get a - faster one
Carroll, David W. 1999. Psychology of Language,
third edition. Pacific Grove Brooks/Cole
Publishing Company, p. 158.
2Categories of Cohesion 2
- Category Example
-
- Ellipsis I wish I had more talent. My
sister has a lot more - than I do.
-
- Conjunction Melissa flunked out of school,
so she is looking - for a job.
-
- Lexical
- Reiteration I saw a boy win the spelling
bee. - The boy was delighted afterward.
- Synonymy I saw a boy win the spelling
bee. - The lad was delighted afterward.
- Hyponymy I saw a boy win the spelling
bee. - The child was delighted afterward
Carroll, David W. 1999. Psychology of Language,
third edition. Pacific Grove Brooks/Cole
Publishing Company, p. 158.
3Cohesion through Pronominalization
- I went to the supermarket and bought a bottle
of milk. I took the bottle of milk home and put
the bottle of milk in the refrigerator. Later,
when I wanted a drink, I took the bottle of milk
out and poured myself a glass of milk. The milk
was sour, so I took the bottle of milk back to
the supermarket to exchange the spoiled bottle of
milk for a good bottle of milk.
4Anaphor and Antecedent
- The rat climbed up the wall to escape through
a hole in the window. I sprayed it with the
shower hose and it fell into the tub with me.
5Use of Cohesive Devices
- I went to the supermarket and bought a bottle
of milk. I took it home and put it in the
refrigerator. Later, when I wanted a drink, I
took the bottle out and poured myself a glass of
milk. The milk was sour, so I took lousy product
back to the supermarket to exchange it for a good
one.
6Given / New Strategy of Sentence Integration
- "In an explicit extension of Grices' (1975)
maxim of relation, Clark and Haviland (1977)
suggest that readers expect authors to use given
information cues to refer to or to signal or
highlight information the readers already know
or can identify and to use new information cues
to refer to concepts with which they the
readers are not already familiar." (160 c)
Carroll, David W. 1999. Psychology of Language,
third edition. Pacific Grove Brooks/Cole
Publishing Company, p. 160.
7Three-Stage Process of Sentence
ComprehensionUsing the Given/New Strategy
- 1. Identify NEW and OLD/GIVEN information in
current - sentence
-
- 2. Find antecedent in memory for GIVEN
-
- 3. Attach NEW information to that spot in memory
Carroll, David W. 1999. Psychology of Language,
third edition. Pacific Grove Brooks/Cole
Publishing Company, p. 160.
8Strategies for Establishing Coherence
- 1. Direct matching (repeat)
- We got some beer out of the trunk.
- The beer was warm.
-
- 2. Bridging (inference)
- Last Christmas John went to a lot of parties.
- This Christmas he got very drunk again.
-
- 3. Reinstating old information
-
- 4. Identifying new topics of discourse
Carroll, David W. 1999. Psychology of Language,
third edition. Pacific Grove Brooks/Cole
Publishing Company, pp. 161-163.
9Late Closure(Frank and Ernest)
Ashcraft, Mark H. 1994. Human Memory and
Cognition, second edition. New York Harper
Collins College Publishers, p. 432.
10Memory for Discourse
- 1. Surface representations (forms)
-
- 2. Propositional representations
-
- 3. Situational models
Carroll, David W. 1999. Psychology of Language,
third edition. Pacific Grove Brooks/Cole
Publishing Company, pp. 166-172.
10
11Discourse Structure Storage
- Information stored in propositions
- Propositions are explicit information
- Propositions also include inferences
- Studies show that higher level propositions
remembered better
Carroll, David W. 1999. Psychology of Language,
third edition. Pacific Grove Brooks/Cole
Publishing Company, pp. 167-170.
11
12Conditions for AutomaticDrawing of Inferences
- 1. "The inference must be necessary to make a
text locally coherent." - 2. "The information on which the inference is
based must be easily activated (either from
explicit statements in the text or from general
knowledge)."
Carroll, David W. 1999. Psychology of Language,
third edition. Pacific Grove Brooks/Cole
Publishing Company, p. 169.
13Untitled Story
- With hocked gems financing him, our hero
bravely - defied all scornful laughter that tried to
present his - scheme. "Your eyes deceive," he had said, "an
egg - not a table correctly typifies this unexplored
planet." - Now three sturdy sisters sought proof, forging
along - sometimes through calm vastness, yet more often
over - turbulent peaks and valleys. Days became weeks
as - many doubters spread fearful rumors about the
edge. - At last from nowhere welcome winged creatures
- appeared signifying momentous success.
(Dolling - Lachman, 1971, p. 217)
Carroll, David W. 1999. Psychology of Language,
third edition. Pacific Grove Brooks/Cole
Publishing Company, pp. 175-176.
14Genres
- Spoken Written
- lecture newspaper article
- sermon opinion article
- comedy monologue presidential
inauguration speech - narrative stories psych journal
article (or thesis) - abstract
- introduction
- method
- results
- discussion
- detective
stories - narrative
stories -
Carroll, David W. 1999. Psychology of Language,
third edition. Pacific Grove Brooks/Cole
Publishing Company, pp. 176-177.
15Educational Implications of Insights on Discourse
Comprehension
- ? Actively Processing Discourse
- ? Connecting Propositions in Discourse
- ? Identifying the Main Points
- ? Building Global Structures
- ? Tailoring Comprehension Activities to Tests
Carroll, David W. 1999. Psychology of Language,
third edition. Pacific Grove Brooks/Cole
Publishing Company, pp. 183-187.