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How the Brain Processes Multimodal Technical Instructions (Paperback, 2nd edition)
Loot Price: R2,476
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How the Brain Processes Multimodal Technical Instructions (Paperback, 2nd edition)
Series: Baywood's Technical Communications
Expected to ship within 12 - 19 working days
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While Aristotle acknowledges the connection between rhetoric,
biology, and cognitive abilities, scholarship continues to struggle
to integrate the fields of rhetoric and neurobiology. Drawing on
recent work in neurorhetoric, this book offers a model that
integrates multimodal rhetorical theory and multisensory neural
processing theory pertaining to cognition and learning. Using
existing theories from multimodal rhetoric and specific findings
from neurobiological studies, the author develops a model that
integrates concepts from both fields, bridging, if not uniting,
them. He also discusses possible applications of the new model,
with specific case studies related to training and instruction.
These applications include various media used in instructional and
training contexts, such as print, slide shows, videos, simulations,
and hands-on training. The book thus introduces concepts of
cognitive neuroscience to multimodal rhetorical theory and
facilitates theorization combining multimodal rhetoric and
multisensory cognition, and serves as a vehicle by which readers
can better understand the links between multimodal rhetoric and
cognitive neuroscience associated with technical communication.
Integrating case studies from industry and practice, the text makes
explicit connections between academic scholarship and workplace
preparation. It also describes how interdisciplinary research can
contribute to pharmaceutical research, as well as the development
of productive instructional materials. Rhetoric is affected by how
the brain of any member of a given audience can process
information. This book can promote further research-qualitative and
quantitative-to develop a better understanding of the relationship
between multimodal messages and how the brain processes such
information.
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