The effects of time-compressed instruction and redundancy on learning and learners’ perceptions of cognitive load |
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Authors: | Ray Pastore |
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Affiliation: | Department of Instructional Technology, Foundations, and Secondary Education, Watson School of Education, University of North Carolina Wilmington (UNCW), 601 S. College Rd., Wilmington, NC 28403, USA |
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Abstract: | Can increasing the speed of audio narration in multimedia instruction decrease training time and still maintain learning? The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of time-compressed instruction and redundancy on learning and learners’ perceptions of cognitive load. 154 university students were placed into conditions that consisted of time-compression (0%, 25%, or 50%) and redundancy (redundant text and narration or narration only). Participants were presented with multimedia instruction on the human heart and its parts then given factual and problem solving knowledge tests, a cognitive load measure, and a review behavior (back and replay buttons) measure. Results of the study indicated that participants who were presented 0% and 25% compression obtained similar scores on both the factual and problem solving measures. Additionally, they indicated similar levels of cognitive load. Participants who were presented redundant instruction were not able to perform as well as participants presented non-redundant instruction. |
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Keywords: | Time-compression Multimedia Multiple representations Redundancy Cognitive load |
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