ABSTRACT

This volume tells the story of research on the cognitive processes of writing—from the perspectives of the early pioneers, the contemporary contributors, and visions of the future for the field.

Writing processes yield important insights into human cognition, and is increasingly becoming a mainstream topic of investigation in cognitive psychology and cognitive neuroscience. Technological advances have made it possible to study cognitive writing processes as writing unfolds in real time. This book provides an introduction to these technologies.

The first part of the volume provides the historical context for the significance of writing research for contemporary cognitive psychology and honors the pioneers in cognitive and social-cognitive research in this field. The book then explores the rapidly expanding work on the social foundations of cognitive processes in writing and considers not only gender differences but also gender similarities in writing. The third part presents a lifespan view of writing in early and middle childhood, adolescence, higher education, and the world of work. There follows an examination of the relationships of language processes –at the word, sentence, and text levels—to the cognitive processes in writing. Part V covers representative research on the cognitive processes of writing—translation and reviewing and revision—and the working memory mechanisms that support those processes. A review of the current technologies used to study these cognitive processes on-line as they happen in real time is provided. Part VII provides an introduction to the emerging new field of the cognitive neuroscience of writing made possible by the rapidly evolving brain imaging technologies, which are interpretable in reference to paradigms in cognitive psychology of writing. The final section of the book offers visions of the future of writing research from the perspective of contemporary leaders in writing research.

part I|86 pages

The Cognitive Tradition in Writing Research

chapter 2|33 pages

Cognitive Processes of Children and Adults in Translating Thought Into Written Language in Real Time

Perspectives From 30 Years of Programmatic Cognitive Psychology and Linguistics Research

chapter 3|26 pages

Teacher-Based Writing Research

part III|138 pages

The Changing Nature of Teaching, Learning, and Assessing Writing Across the Life Span: K–12, Adolescence, Higher Education, and the Work World

part IV|125 pages

Levels of Language Processes in Writing

chapter 13|18 pages

Translating Nonverbal Pictures Into Verbal Word Names

Understanding Lexical Access and Retrieval

chapter 15|30 pages

Toward a Redefinition of Spelling in Shallow Orthographies

Phonological, Lexical, and Grammatical Skills in Learning to Spell Italian

part V|65 pages

Cognitive Processes in Writing

chapter 19|19 pages

Eye-Tracking Data During Written Recall

Clues to subject–verb Agreement Processing During Translation

chapter 20|23 pages

Evaluation and Revision

chapter 21|19 pages

Working Memory in Writing

part VI|29 pages

Applications of Technology to Studying and Teaching Writing

part VII|29 pages

Emerging Cognitive Neuroscience of Writing

chapter 23|27 pages

The Writing Brain

Coordinating Sensory/Motor, Language, and Cognitive Systems in Working Memory

part VIII|34 pages

Visions of the Future of Writing Research