The Animation Composition Principle in Multimedia Learning.
Mayer, Richard E. ; Fiorella, Logan (Hrsg). The Cambridge Handbook of Multimedia Learning. 3. Aufl. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2020 S. 313 - 323
Erscheinungsjahr: 2020
ISBN/ISSN: 9781108814669
Publikationstyp: Buchbeitrag (Übersichtsartikel)
Sprache: Englisch
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Inhaltszusammenfassung
Research has shown that animated graphics are not the educational magic bullet that many expected them to be. They are neither necessarily superior to static graphics nor intrinsically effective in their own right. The Animation Composition Principle characterizes learning from animation as a hierarchical relation-building process by which mental models of the depicted subject matter are progressively and cumulatively constructed from discrete information primitives. It helps explain the limi...Research has shown that animated graphics are not the educational magic bullet that many expected them to be. They are neither necessarily superior to static graphics nor intrinsically effective in their own right. The Animation Composition Principle characterizes learning from animation as a hierarchical relation-building process by which mental models of the depicted subject matter are progressively and cumulatively constructed from discrete information primitives. It helps explain the limited success of previous attempts to improve animation’s effectiveness that took no account of their fundamental design. By giving due consideration to both perceptual and cognitive aspects of animation processing, the Animation Processing Model that embodies this Principle opens the door to novel, more effective compositional design options. Because such designs are founded on better matching of how animations present their information with the way learners actually process these dynamic representations, compositional animations significantly improve learning outcomes. » weiterlesen» einklappen
Klassifikation
DFG Fachgebiet:
Psychologie
DDC Sachgruppe:
Psychologie