2004
DOI: 10.1016/j.learninstruc.2004.06.005
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The cognitive benefits of interactive videos: learning to tie nautical knots

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Cited by 369 publications
(254 citation statements)
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References 18 publications
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“…Whereas research reported inconsistent findings, with some studies showing a benefit of control (Boucheix & Guignard, 2005;Mayer & Chandler, 2001;Schwan & Riempp, 2004), these findings are in line with other studies that found no benefit (for example Adesope & Nesbit, 2012). As such, the system-paced presentation, together with the transient nature of animation, frequently seen as a drawback, did not impede learners to study the current information and images while integrating the previous learning content (Moreno & Mayer, 2007).…”
Section: How Are Animation Effects Influenced By Factors Related To Tsupporting
confidence: 67%
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“…Whereas research reported inconsistent findings, with some studies showing a benefit of control (Boucheix & Guignard, 2005;Mayer & Chandler, 2001;Schwan & Riempp, 2004), these findings are in line with other studies that found no benefit (for example Adesope & Nesbit, 2012). As such, the system-paced presentation, together with the transient nature of animation, frequently seen as a drawback, did not impede learners to study the current information and images while integrating the previous learning content (Moreno & Mayer, 2007).…”
Section: How Are Animation Effects Influenced By Factors Related To Tsupporting
confidence: 67%
“…The possibility for learners to adapt the pacing of the information stream to their comprehension capacities was found to facilitate the construction of an efficient mental model. Compared to no control or interaction mode, the pacing control over the animation was beneficial for students (H€ offler & Schwartz, 2011;Mayer & Chandler, 2001;Nesbit & Adesope, 2011;Schwan & Riempp, 2004) and for children (Boucheix & Guignard, 2005). However, many other studies found that control over the pacing of the animation did not enhance comprehension (Betrancourt & Realini, 2005;Hegarty et al, 2003;Kriz & Hegarty, 2004;Rebetez & Betrancourt, 2007), even with novice learners (Lowe, 2003).…”
Section: Factors Related To the Instructional Materialsmentioning
confidence: 96%
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“…The opportunity to pause, continue or move forward and backward enables learners to adapt the video-based model to their cognitive needs (e.g., by going back to a specific action of the model). For example, in a study by Schwan and Riempp (2004) learners saw a video about nautical knotting and could accelerate, decelerate, stop or repeat the video. This control of pacing was heavily used, especially with increasing knot difficulty.…”
Section: Pacingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rapid developments in computer and software technology in the last decades have enabled a dimension of learner controlled interactivity that goes beyond merely controlling the pace of presentation, because learners can also manipulate the appearance of the modeled performance, such as zoom in/out on a specific part of the performance or observing the performance of a model from another angle (Hegarty 2004;Schwan and Riempp 2004). For example, during the observation of a surgery by an expert surgeon, the learner can decide to zoom in to a specific act in order to get a better view of the fine-grained motor skill.…”
Section: Control Over Appearancementioning
confidence: 99%