hkr.sePublications
Change search
Refine search result
1 - 39 of 39
CiteExportLink to result list
Permanent link
Cite
Citation style
  • apa
  • ieee
  • modern-language-association-8th-edition
  • vancouver
  • Other style
More styles
Language
  • de-DE
  • en-GB
  • en-US
  • fi-FI
  • nn-NO
  • nn-NB
  • sv-SE
  • Other locale
More languages
Output format
  • html
  • text
  • asciidoc
  • rtf
Rows per page
  • 5
  • 10
  • 20
  • 50
  • 100
  • 250
Sort
  • Standard (Relevance)
  • Author A-Ö
  • Author Ö-A
  • Title A-Ö
  • Title Ö-A
  • Publication type A-Ö
  • Publication type Ö-A
  • Issued (Oldest first)
  • Issued (Newest first)
  • Created (Oldest first)
  • Created (Newest first)
  • Last updated (Oldest first)
  • Last updated (Newest first)
  • Disputation date (earliest first)
  • Disputation date (latest first)
  • Standard (Relevance)
  • Author A-Ö
  • Author Ö-A
  • Title A-Ö
  • Title Ö-A
  • Publication type A-Ö
  • Publication type Ö-A
  • Issued (Oldest first)
  • Issued (Newest first)
  • Created (Oldest first)
  • Created (Newest first)
  • Last updated (Oldest first)
  • Last updated (Newest first)
  • Disputation date (earliest first)
  • Disputation date (latest first)
Select
The maximal number of hits you can export is 250. When you want to export more records please use the Create feeds function.
  • 1.
    Andrén, Mats
    et al.
    Lunds universitet.
    Andersson, Annika
    Lunds universitet.
    Håkansson, Gisela
    Lunds universitet.
    Gullberg, Marianne
    Lunds universitet.
    Johansson, Victoria
    Kristianstad University, School of Education and Environment, Avdelningen för Humanvetenskap. Lunds universitet.
    Sayehli, Susan
    Lunds universitet.
    Att lära sig språk2013In: Språket, människan och världen: människans språk 1-2 / [ed] Victoria Johansson, Gerd Carling & Arthur Holmer, Lund: Studentlitteratur AB, 2013Chapter in book (Other (popular science, discussion, etc.))
  • 2.
    Carling, Gerd
    et al.
    Lunds universitet.
    Johansson, VictoriaLunds universitet.Holmer, ArthurLunds universitet.
    Språket, människan och världen: lärarmaterial2014Collection (editor) (Other (popular science, discussion, etc.))
  • 3.
    Frid, Johan
    et al.
    Lunds universitet.
    Johansson, Victoria
    Lunds universitet.
    Johansson, Roger
    Lunds universitet.
    Wengelin, Åsa
    Göteborgs universitet.
    Johansson, Mikael
    Lunds universitet.
    Developing a keystroke logging program into a writing experiment environment2014Conference paper (Refereed)
  • 4.
    Frid, Johan
    et al.
    Lunds universitet.
    Wengelin, Åsa
    Lunds universitet.
    Johansson, Victoria
    Lunds universitet.
    Johansson, Roger
    Lunds universitet.
    Johansson, Mikael
    Lunds universitet.
    Testing the temporal accuracy of keystroke logging using the sound card2012Conference paper (Refereed)
  • 5.
    Grenner, Emily
    et al.
    Lunds universitet.
    Asker-Árnason, Lena
    Lunds universitet.
    Johansson, Victoria
    Lunds universitet.
    Åkerlund, Viktoria
    Lunds universitet.
    van de Weijer, Joost
    Lunds universitet.
    Sahlén, Birgitta
    Lunds universitet.
    The joy of writing: peer learning in written narrative intervention2014Conference paper (Refereed)
  • 6.
    Grenner, Emily
    et al.
    Lund University.
    Braaksma, Martine
    Amsterdam Unviersity.
    Johansson, Victoria
    Lund University.
    Åkerlund, Viktoria
    Lund University.
    Asker-Àrnason, Lena
    Lund University.
    van de Weijer, Joost
    Lund University.
    Sahlén, Birgitta
    Lund University.
    Improving narrative skills through observational learning2015Conference paper (Refereed)
  • 7.
    Grenner, Emily
    et al.
    Lunds universitet.
    Johansson, Victoria
    Lunds universitet.
    van de Weijer, Joost
    Lunds universitet.
    Asker-Árnason, Lena
    Lunds universitet.
    Åkerlund, Viktoria
    Lunds universitet.
    Sahlén, Birgitta
    Lunds universitet.
    Observational learning and narrative writing: improving text quality for children with and without hearing impairment2015Conference paper (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    Emily Grenner & Joost van de Weijer & Lena Asker-Árnason & Victoria Johansson & Viktoria Åkerlund & Birgitta S.M. Sahlén The aim of this intervention study is to investigate if observational learning can improve narrative writing skills in 11-year-olds with and without hearing impairment. Observational learning occurs when people learn new skills from observing others, who act as models (Bandura 1997). Observing peers’ reading and writing is especially important since these processes often are invisible, and children therefore lack models for their own processes. This study was theoretically and methodologically inspired by Rijlaarsdam et al. 2008.  Participants consisted of Swedish 5th-graders from two schools (School A, n=33; and School B, n= 26) with normal hearing children (NH), and from 3rd to 8:th-grade children with hearing-impairment (HI), from “hearing classes” (n=18). Prior to the intervention, background data e.g., on working memory and linguistic background was collected. In the research design the two schools with NH children (School A and B) functioned as each other's controls. The HI-school followed the School A order. All participants first wrote a personal narrative on the computer, using keystroke-logging. Then the intervention followed for School A and HI-school, while School B received ordinary lessons (with no writing instructions). After the first intervention period, all participants wrote a new narrative. Thereafter, the intervention was replicated for School B, while School A and the HI-school had ordinary tutoring. After the second intervention period, all participants wrote new narratives. The intervention consisted of 5 thematically different lessons: Lesson themes were: reader perspective, chronological structure, closing elements, revising of a peer’s text and online revision.  To evaluate the text quality, all texts (n=231) were holistically rated by three independent, trained evaluators. The results showed an improvement in quality between text 1 and text 2 for School A and the HI-School, while School B had an improvement between text 2 and text 3. This shows that narrative text quality can be improved by a short series of carefully designed intervention lessons using observational learning, which contributes to the discussion about educational methods for teaching writing.  Further analyses will address quantitative measures of text length, lexicon, syntactic complexity, pausing and editing, as well as a comparison between the NH and HI group.

  • 8.
    Gustafsson, Pia
    et al.
    Lunds universitet.
    Johansson, Victoria
    Kristianstad University, School of Education and Environment, Avdelningen för Humanvetenskap. Lunds universitet.
    Wengelin, Åsa
    Lunds universitet.
    Johansson, Roger
    Lunds universitet.
    Pausering i skrift – skrivflyt i olika åldersgrupper2013Conference paper (Refereed)
  • 9.
    Johansson, Roger
    et al.
    Lund University.
    Johansson, Victoria
    Lund University.
    Wengelin, Åsa
    Lund University.
    Text production in handwriting versus computer typing2012In: Learning to write effectively: current trends in European writing research / [ed] Torrance, M., Alamargot, D., Castelló, M., Ganier, F., Kruse, O., Mangen, A., Tolchinsky, L., van Waes, L., Leiden: Brill Academic Publishers, 2012, p. 375-379Chapter in book (Refereed)
  • 10.
    Johansson, Roger
    et al.
    Lunds universitet.
    Johansson, Victoria
    Lunds universitet.
    Wengelin, Åsa
    Lunds universitet.
    Holmqvist, Kenneth
    Lunds universitet.
    Reading during text production2012In: Learning to write effectively: current trends in European research / [ed] Torrance, M., Alamargot, D., Castelló, M., Ganier, F., Kruse, O., Mangen, A., Tolchinsky, L., van Waes, L., Brill Academic Publishers, 2012, p. 359-363Chapter in book (Refereed)
  • 11.
    Johansson, Roger
    et al.
    Lunds universitet.
    Wengelin, Åsa
    Lunds universitet.
    Johansson, Victoria
    Lunds universitet.
    Johansson, Mikael
    Lunds universitet.
    Reading a finished text versus reading your own emerging text2012Conference paper (Refereed)
  • 12.
    Johansson, Victoria
    Kristianstad University, School of Education and Environment, Avdelningen för Humanvetenskap. Lunds universitet.
    Att undersöka språk2013In: Språket, människan och världen: människans språk 1-2 / [ed] Victoria Johansson, Gerd Carling & Arthur Holmer, Lund: Studentlitteratur AB, 2013Chapter in book (Other (popular science, discussion, etc.))
  • 13.
    Johansson, Victoria
    Lunds universitet.
    Developmental aspects of text production in writing and speech2009Doctoral thesis, monograph (Other academic)
    Abstract [en]

    This thesis aims at describing the developmental patterns of text production in four text types: spoken and written narrative texts, and spoken and written expository texts (n=316), produced by four age groups: 10-year-olds, 13-year-olds, 17-year-olds and university students (n=79). It explores material from an experimental study with a cross-sectional design comprising spoken texts recorded on video and written texts recorded by means of keystroke logging, which makes it possible to investigate the real-time process of written text production.

    Various measures of text production were compared across age, genre and modality. This revealed almost no differences between 10-year-olds and 13-year-olds concerning the number of words, clauses or T-units. Nor were there any differences between the 17-year-olds and the university students. This indicates that a major developmental step occurs between the ages of 13 and 17. However, other results, including comparisons of MLU, words per T-unit and clauses per T-unit, an analysis of lexical density and diversity in both speech and writing, and an investigation of the use of editing and deletion operations on the keyboard during text writing, all suggest that the developmental trend is more complex. One example is that the 13-year-olds have a higher MLU and more words per T-unit than the 10-year-olds.

    Further, the investigation of the keystroke-logging data reveals the real-time process behind the texts. Here we find that the 13-year-olds engage in editing operations to a larger degree. The comparatively short and lexically poor texts (especially in the expository genre) of the 13-year-olds can thus be interpreted as the result of their struggling to meet the structural demands of a specific text type. Further findings indicate that although 17-year-olds in many ways can compete with university students in writing, if they are allowed to write for longer time. However, the university students perform better at the expository spoken task, suggesting that the adults are better at drawing from strategies learned from writing as they carry out a cognitively demanding spoken task. Finally, an analysis of the global pause pattern during writing suggests that genre characteristics are important factors that influence the cognitive load during text writing.

    The interplay between speech and writing is an important factor for developing and maintaining skills in both modalities. While the writing of the youngest age group in this study is influenced by strategies derived from speaking, the adults seem able to benefit from strategies and linguistic structures learned through writing when they are, for example, giving a speech. The thesis ends with a discussion of how constraints affecting working memory influcence performance in both speech and writing. To reduce the cognitive effort of language production, both speakers and writers rely on strategies and knowledge they have previously acquired. This entails an important transfer of knowledge and structures between both modalities and genres. 

  • 14.
    Johansson, Victoria
    Lunds universitet.
    Handwriting or typing – a comparative study2014Conference paper (Other academic)
  • 15.
    Johansson, Victoria
    Lunds universitet.
    The writer and the reader: advanced writers’ cognitive processes during writing2015Conference paper (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    In their seminal writing model from 1981, Hayes & Flower identify three main components: planning, translation and reviewing. However, it is unclear how aware the writer is about the importance of these processes during writing, and what a writer herself would identify as her most important writing processes. It is also uncertain if different processes are in focus during different stages in the development of writing. Bereiter & Scardamaila’s (1987) model of knowledge tellers and knowledge transformers, in combination with Kellogg’s (2008) addition of knowledge crafters describes a development from a writer who is interested in telling everything from beginning to end, to a writer who modifies and edit her text, to a writer who has focus on the reader’s experience of the text.

    In this study in-depth interviews were used to find out how advanced writers think about their own writing processes. We were particularly interested in the writer’s shift from the text (knowledge transformer) to the reader’s experience of the text (knowledge crafter).

    We recruited 16 participants from a university program for creative writing. Most, if not all, aim at becoming professional authors. All participants volunteered to take part in a writing experiment in the beginning of their 2-year-program. However, this study focuses on the second part of the study: interviews about their views and definition of writing. More specifically the open questions dealt with their thoughts on editing, planning, reading and how “present” the reader was during their writing processes. Their answers were contrasted to a group of established authors (n=7) who got the same questions. The findings so far indicate that the students to a much less degree than the established authors planned their writing project on a global level. The students were further more concerned about their own exploration of their writing than what a potential reader may think about the text. A difference in the student group found between those few who had previously worked professionally with writing (e.g. journalists), where the awareness of the future reader were equally present as in the group of established authors.

    The results give room for different reflection on the students’ views on planning and the reader:

    1.The students may take their education in creative writing as an opportunity to explore their own writing processes, and thus putting less emphasize on both the global planning of the text and the potential readers’ reactions. In a different context they may be more concerned about the reader.

    2.The students were in the beginning of their education during these interviews. The program put great effort in letting their students meet and receive reader reactions to their texts. Consequently, a follow-up interview by the end of the program may reveal a different awareness of the reader.

    This study gives a contribution to the field of life-long learning and development of writ-ing. It will also add important knowledge for the development of teaching methods for adult writers.

  • 16.
    Johansson, Victoria
    Lunds universitet.
    Writing – it's like learning a new language!2013In: Language acquisition and use in multilingual contexts / [ed] Anna Flyman Mattson & Catrin Norrby, Lund: Lund University Publications , 2013, p. 70-79Chapter in book (Refereed)
  • 17.
    Johansson, Victoria
    et al.
    Kristianstad University, School of Education and Environment, Avdelningen för Humanvetenskap. Lunds universitet.
    Andersson, Annika
    Lunds universitet.
    Horne, Merle
    Lunds universitet.
    Mårtensson, Frida
    Lunds universitet.
    Roll, Mikael
    Lunds universitet.
    Strandviken, Teresa
    Lunds universitet.
    Sayehli, Susan
    Lunds universitet.
    Språk och hjärna2013In: Språket, människan och världen: människans språk 1-2 / [ed] Victoria Johansson, Gerd Carling & Arthur Holmer, Lund: Studentlitteratur AB, 2013Chapter in book (Other (popular science, discussion, etc.))
  • 18.
    Johansson, Victoria
    et al.
    Lunds universitet.
    Anna W, Gustafsson
    Lunds universitet.
    Varför språkvetare?: om varför-frågor och forskningsetiska principer2014Conference paper (Refereed)
  • 19.
    Johansson, Victoria
    et al.
    Kristianstad University, School of Education and Environment, Avdelningen för Humanvetenskap. Lunds universitet.
    Asker-Árnason, Lena
    Lunds universitet.
    Grenner, Emily
    Lunds universitet.
    Sahlén, Birgitta
    Lunds universitet.
    Öka skrivlusten!: tangentbordsloggning och kamratobservation – nya verktyg för textskapande hos barn2013Conference paper (Other academic)
  • 20.
    Johansson, Victoria
    et al.
    Kristianstad University, School of Education and Environment, Avdelningen för Humanvetenskap. Lunds universitet.
    Blomberg, Johan
    Lunds universitet.
    Håkansson, Gisela
    Lunds universitet.
    Gullberg, Marianne
    Lunds universitet.
    Människan och språket2013In: Språket, människan och världen: människans språk 1-2 / [ed] Victoria Johansson, Gerd Carling & Arthur Holmer, Lund: Studentlitteratur AB, 2013Chapter in book (Other (popular science, discussion, etc.))
  • 21.
    Johansson, Victoria
    et al.
    Lunds universitet.
    Carling, GerdLunds universitet.Holmer, ArthurLunds universitet.
    Språket, människan och världen: människans språk 1-22013Collection (editor) (Other (popular science, discussion, etc.))
    Abstract [sv]

    Språket, människan och världen är en introduktion till lingvistik,utvecklad för gymnasiekurserna Människans språk 1 och 2 på det humanistiska programmet.

    I läromedlet lotsas eleverna genom språkvetenskapens olika delar.Här presenteras grunderna i ämnet, liksom den nyaste forskningen. Tanken är att eleverna ska få stifta bekantskap med en bred palett av språklig allmänbildning, snarare än detaljer om enskilda språk.I 15 kapitel behandlas språket som system (ljudsystem,böjningssystem, satsbyggnad, skriftsystem), språkets sociala,psykologiska, historiska och biologiska aspekter, språkinlärning,språkteknologi, psykolingvistik och läs- och skrivforskning samt olika metoder för att undersöka språk.Med många exempel illustreras världens språkliga mångfald och var svenskan placerar sig i denna mångfald.I läromedlets digitala del finns faktafördjupningar, interaktiva övningar m.m. samt en digital version av boken inläst med textföljning.Språket, människan och världen är skriven av ett tjugotal författare, verksamma som lärare, forskare och doktorander i lingvistik och närbesläktade ämnen vid Lunds universitet.

  • 22.
    Johansson, Victoria
    et al.
    Lunds universitet.
    Gustafsson, Pia
    Lunds universitet.
    Vad gör man när man skriver?: om processen bakom den färdiga texten2012Conference paper (Refereed)
    Abstract [sv]

    Idag är skriftspråk viktigt inom de flesta yrkesområden, och redan tonåringar kommunicerar via skrift inte bara i traditionella genrer, utan även på många sätt via sociala medier. Den som saknar förmåga att uttrycka sig i skrift har svårt att klara såväl arbetsliv som studier. Vi vet dock ganska lite om relationen mellan den färdiga skriftspråksprodukten och processen bakom, trots att sådan kunskap bl a kan vara till hjälp för att utveckla metoder för skrivinlärning. I ett språkvetenskapligt experiment användes tangentbordsloggning för att undersöka processen bakom tillkomsten av 30 utredande uppsatser skrivna på dator, av 30 tonåringar, i åldrarna 13, 15 och 17 år. Alla skrev på sitt förstaspråk (svenska), och ingen hade läs- och skrivsvårigheter. I efterhand gav s.k. linjära filer en överblick av pauser och redigeringar under skrivandet. Alla pauser längre än 2 s (totalt 3080 st.) kodades med avseende på sin grammatiskta/syntaktiskta placering (internt, eller i gränsen mellan ord, fras eller sats).

    Resultatet visade en sammansatt bild. För det första fanns en stegvis utveckling av antal ord i den färdiga texten. 13-åringarnas texter hade minst antal ord och 17-åringarnas flest. 15-åringarna placerade sig i mitten, men skilde sig inte statistiskt från de andra. Räknades antalet tecken i de färdiga texterna fanns signifikanta åldersskillnader mellan alla grupper. Om vi däremot studerade tecknen i den linjära texten producerade 17-åringarna flest, men det fanns ingen skillnad mellan 13- och 15-åringar. När vi slutligen undersökte hur stor andel av tecknen som suddades ut upptäcktes att 15-åringarna tog bort signifikant färre tecken. Vidare undersökningar av redigeringsmönstren visade att 13-åringarna ägnade sig mycket åt stavningsredigeringar, medan 17-åringarna ändrade ord och fraser. 15-åringarna skrev mer från början till slut och gjorde mycket få ändringar. Vid en jämförelse av i vilka syntaktiska kontexter man lade störst proportion av sin paustid under skrivandet, ägnade 17-åringarna signifikant mer tid åt att pausa i samband med att de skrev fraser. Detta tyder på att de anstränger sig för att hitta rätt ord för sina tankar, och att de har flyttat fokus delvis från vad de själva vill säga till hur läsaren kan tänkas uppfatta texten.

    Sammanfattningsvis finns ett komplext samband mellan det som syns i den färdiga produkten (t.ex. antal ord och antal tecken i den färdiga texten) och det arbete som skribenten lagt ner för att åstadkomma produkten (t ex antal tecken i den linjära texten, fördelningen av paustid i samband med fraser). Det är svårt att avgöra hur överförbara resultat från produktionen av utredande texter är för skrivandet i andra genrer, men processen bakom den färdigskrivna produkten ger både insikter i hur skrivande i allmänhet går till, och ökad kunskap om hur skrivutveckling kan se ut.

  • 23.
    Johansson, Victoria
    et al.
    Lunds universitet.
    Gustafsson, Pia
    Lunds universitet.
    Writing development during adolescence – what keystroke logging can reveal2012Conference paper (Refereed)
  • 24.
    Johansson, Victoria
    et al.
    Lunds universitet.
    Gustafsson, Pia
    Lunds universitet.
    Johansson, Roger
    Lunds universitet.
    Wengelin, Åsa
    Lunds universitet.
    Reader-awareness in adult writers: an investigation of university students at a creative writing-program2015Conference paper (Refereed)
  • 25.
    Johansson, Victoria
    et al.
    Lunds universitet.
    Gustafsson, Pia
    Lunds universitet.
    Wengelin, Åsa
    University of Gothenburg.
    Revising and pausing in relation to syntactic development2015Conference paper (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    The aim of this paper is to explore revision by recording how editing patterns develop with age and experience. The data consist of 135 expository texts, collected in an experimental setting, using key-logging that records the writing, including editing and pausing behaviour. The participants were divided into five age groups: 10-year-olds (n=20), 13-year-olds (n=20), 15-year-olds (n=20), 17-year-olds (n=20) and adult university students (n=55). A subgroup of the adults (n=16) consisted of ‘experts’ who worked with texts professionally. This investigation focusses on the 7 051 pauses which occurred in connection with editing, here defined as the use of delete, arrow keys or mouse. The ‘editing pauses’ were coded for grammatical context, preceding and following the pause. Findings reveal that several editings often occur together, and that this phenomenon increases with age and expertise. For all groups, editings occur to a great extent between sentences. However, writers from 17-year-olds and upwards, are more mobile, i.e. they are not solely concerned with editing the immediately written text, but the changes are being carried out on a more global text level. In the group of ‘expert adults’, sometimes more than 40 % of the total writing time is devoted to editing the previously written text. The findings in this study show clearly that the editing behaviour develops far into adulthood. Educationally, this has implications for teaching methods on writing in general and on text editing in particular

  • 26.
    Johansson, Victoria
    et al.
    Kristianstad University, School of Education and Environment, Avdelningen för Humanvetenskap. Lunds universitet.
    Holsanova, Jana
    Lunds universitet.
    Johansson, Roger
    Lunds universitet.
    Wengelin, Åsa
    Lunds universitet.
    Tala läsa skriva2013In: Språket, människan och världen: människans språk 1-2 / [ed] Victoria Johansson, Gerd Carling & Arhtur Holmer, Lund: Studentlitteratur AB, 2013Chapter in book (Other (popular science, discussion, etc.))
  • 27.
    Johansson, Victoria
    et al.
    Kristianstad University, School of Education and Environment, Avdelningen för Humanvetenskap. Lunds universitet.
    Johansson, Roger
    Lunds universitet.
    Frid, Johan
    Lunds universitet.
    Wengelin, Åsa
    Lunds universitet.
    Looking on and away from the word currently being typed in expository text writing2015Conference paper (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    Visual feedback from the writer’s own emerging text is generally assumed to be an important component in the process of writing. For instance, in Hayes’ (1996) model it is considered to be critically involved in the subprocesses of monitoring and revision. Despite this, few empirical investigations have actually addressed this issue and in contrast to general expectations contemporary research by Oxborough and Torrance (2012) suggests that visual feedback from the text may in fact not be essential for the production of coherent texts. However, research (e.g. Johansson et al 2010) shows that writers indeed monitor their texts during writing, and that there is a relation between editing behavior and the amount of time spent looking at the text. One question is which role the visual input has for the writer, since it is does not seem to be necessary for text production, in other words: what do the writer do when she look at the text during writing. Visual feedback from an emerging text can roughly be divided into two categories of gaze behavior: fixations concurrent with keyboard typing and fixations during pauses (when no keys are struck). The current study focuses on the former and used a combination of eye-tracking and keystroke logging to collect data for 14 relatively automatized touch typists when they wrote an expository text for 30 minutes. Collapsed over all participants, this rendered 26 349 instances where a keystroke occurred concurrent with a fixation on the emerging text. Of those keystrokes 18 450 belonged to text production and 4188 to text deletions (e.g. backspaces). On average, 87 % of the text production keystrokes were performed with fixations on the word currently being typed and with a mean location of 6 characters to the left of the inscription point. For the deletion keystrokes, corresponding measures were 68 % and 6 characters to the left of the inscription point. This means that the remaining keystrokes (13 % during text production and 32 % during deletions) occurred together with more distant fixations on previous text segments. While it has been argued that fixations on the word currently being typed are related to monitoring and error correction (Torrance & Wengelin, 2010) very little is known about the role of fixations away from the word currently being typed, and even less whether the visual feedback they provide are useful at all. Qualitative explorations of those instances in the present dataset suggest that they are indeed useful and frequently appear to be associated with referential cuing and content generation.

  • 28.
    Johansson, Victoria
    et al.
    Lunds universitet.
    Johansson, Roger
    Lunds universitet.
    Wengelin, Åsa
    Lunds universitet.
    Handwriting and typing: a comparison between written product and writing processes2015Conference paper (Refereed)
  • 29.
    Johansson, Victoria
    et al.
    Kristianstad University, School of Education and Environment, Avdelningen för Humanvetenskap. Lunds universitet.
    Palviainen, Åsa
    Finland.
    Pausing during narrative writing: a comparison between L1 and L2 writers2015Conference paper (Refereed)
  • 30.
    Johansson, Victoria
    et al.
    Kristianstad University, School of Education and Environment, Avdelningen för Humanvetenskap. Lunds universitet.
    Pia, Gustafsson
    Lunds universitet.
    Wengelin, Åsa
    Lunds universitet.
    Pausing during writing – a developmental perspective2013Conference paper (Refereed)
  • 31.
    Johansson, Victoria
    et al.
    Lunds universitet.
    Wengelin, Åsa
    Lunds universitet.
    Johansson, Roger
    Lunds universitet.
    Frid, Johan
    Lunds universitet.
    Comparing the writing processes in writing with and without the triple task2014Conference paper (Refereed)
  • 32.
    Palviainen, Åsa
    et al.
    Finland.
    Johansson, Victoria
    Kristianstad University, School of Education and Environment, Avdelningen för Humanvetenskap. Lunds universitet.
    Pause distribution in narrative production of L1 and L22013Conference paper (Refereed)
  • 33.
    Torrance, Mark
    et al.
    Psychology division, Nottingham Trent University, Nottingham, UK.
    Johansson, Roger
    Department of psychology, Lund University.
    Johansson, Victoria
    Lunds universitet.
    Wengelin, Åsa
    Institutionen för svenska, Göteborgs universitet.
    Reading during the composition of multi-sentence texts: an eye-movement study2015In: Psychological Research, ISSN 0340-0727, E-ISSN 1430-2772Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    Writers composing multi-sentence texts have immediate access to a visual representation of what they have written. Little is known about the detail of writers’ eye movements within this text during production. We describe two experiments in which competent adult writ- ers’ eye movements were tracked while performing short expository writing tasks. These are contrasted with condi- tions in which participants read and evaluated researcher- provided texts. Writers spent a mean of around 13 % of their time looking back into their text. Initiation of these look-back sequences was strongly predicted by linguisti- cally important boundaries in their ongoing production (e.g., writers were much more likely to look back imme- diately prior to starting a new sentence). 36 % of look-back sequences were associated with sustained reading and the remainder with less patterned forward and backward sac- cades between words (‘‘hopping’’). Fixation and gaze durations and the presence of word-length effects sug- gested lexical processing of fixated words in both reading and hopping sequences. Word frequency effects were not present when writers read their own text. Findings demonstrate the technical possibility and potential value of examining writers’ fixations within their just-written text. 

    We suggest that these fixations do not serve solely, or even primarily, in monitoring for error, but play an important role in planning ongoing production. 

  • 34.
    van de Weijer, Joost
    et al.
    Lunds universitet.
    Johansson, Victoria
    Lunds universitet.
    Åkerlund, Viktoria
    Lunds universitet.
    Sahlén, Birgitta
    Lunds universitet.
    Simon says… Can observational learning improve argumentative writing in students with hearing impairment?2014Conference paper (Refereed)
  • 35.
    Wengelin, Åsa
    et al.
    University of Gothenburg.
    Johansson, Roger
    Lund University.
    Johansson, Victoria
    Kristianstad University, School of Education and Environment, Avdelningen för Humanvetenskap. Lund University.
    Expressive writing in Swedish 15-year-olds with reading and writing difficulties2014In: Writing development in children with hearing loss, dyslexia, or oral language problems: implications for assessment and instruction / [ed] Barbara Arfé, Julie Dockrell & Virginia Berninger, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014Chapter in book (Refereed)
  • 36.
    Wengelin, Åsa
    et al.
    Lunds universitet.
    Johansson, Roger
    Lunds universitet.
    Johansson, Victoria
    Lunds universitet.
    Writing difficulties in Swedish university students with reading and writing difficulties2012Conference paper (Refereed)
  • 37.
    Wengelin, Åsa
    et al.
    Lunds universitet.
    Johansson, Roger
    Lunds universitet.
    Johansson, Victoria
    Lunds universitet.
    Writing processes and text characteristics of texts produced in a triple-task situation2014Conference paper (Refereed)
  • 38.
    Wengelin, Åsa
    et al.
    Lunds universitet.
    Johansson, Victoria
    Kristianstad University, School of Education and Environment, Avdelningen för Humanvetenskap. Lunds universitet.
    The relation between language and literacy skills in Finnish-Swedish children2013Conference paper (Refereed)
  • 39.
    Wengelin, Åsa
    et al.
    Lunds universitet.
    Johansson, Victoria
    Lunds universitet.
    Writing dynamics and text quality in first and second language2014Conference paper (Refereed)
1 - 39 of 39
CiteExportLink to result list
Permanent link
Cite
Citation style
  • apa
  • ieee
  • modern-language-association-8th-edition
  • vancouver
  • Other style
More styles
Language
  • de-DE
  • en-GB
  • en-US
  • fi-FI
  • nn-NO
  • nn-NB
  • sv-SE
  • Other locale
More languages
Output format
  • html
  • text
  • asciidoc
  • rtf