Processing and understanding inferential techniques in visual narratives

DOI

This project examined the processing of bridging inferences in visual narratives, i.e. when readers need to infer information missing in a previous panel in a comic sequence. Rather than omitting the key event, this study replaced the climax of the scene with a variety of five inferential techniques, which implicitly express the unseen event while each balancing several underlying features that describe their informativeness. The main question asked to what extent the processing of these techniques differed. Two self-paced reading experiments measured viewing times as well as comprehensibility ratings; experiment 1 directly compared the five types and experiment 2 explored the effect of combining techniques. Additionally, this project explored the underlying features as predictors for viewing times and ratings.

See the file Data report.pdf for detailed information and documentation on all files present in the dataset. This includes explanation of column names and values in the data files. Method: Online survey combined with labjs plug-in to gain experimental data (viewing times). Universe: A general sample of English-speaking people, not required to be experienced comic readers.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.34894/DTBW7M
Metadata Access https://dataverse.nl/oai?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_datacite&identifier=doi:10.34894/DTBW7M
Provenance
Creator Klomberg, Bien ORCID logo; Cohn, Neil ORCID logo
Publisher DataverseNL
Contributor Klomberg, Bien; DataverseNL
Publication Year 2022
Rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
OpenAccess true
Contact Klomberg, Bien (Tilburg University)
Representation
Resource Type Experimental data; Dataset
Format text/csv; application/pdf; text/html
Size 156859; 81929; 196077; 37415; 71081; 768010; 122587; 1336832; 13401; 2453982; 31953; 6064809; 631434; 873894; 1285743; 55067; 202114; 22279; 1982134; 37240; 3931508; 631438; 871995; 873101; 749784; 71254
Version 2.1
Discipline Computer Science; Computer Science, Electrical and System Engineering; Engineering Sciences; Humanities; Information Science
Spatial Coverage Tilburg, the Netherlands