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Roxana Moreno

Researcher at University of New Mexico

Publications -  65
Citations -  16494

Roxana Moreno is an academic researcher from University of New Mexico. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cognitive load & Instructional design. The author has an hindex of 42, co-authored 65 publications receiving 15170 citations. Previous affiliations of Roxana Moreno include University of California, Santa Barbara.

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Nine Ways to Reduce Cognitive Load in Multimedia Learning

TL;DR: The analysis shows that cognitive load is a central consideration in the design of multimedia instruction because it exceeds the learner's available cognitive capacity.
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Cognitive Principles of Multimedia Learning: The Role of Modality and Contiguity

TL;DR: Park et al. as mentioned in this paper found that students learned better when verbal input was presented auditorily as speech rather than visually as text, and that visual and verbal materials were physically close to each other.
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A Split-Attention Effect in Multimedia Learning: Evidence for Dual Processing Systems in Working Memory

TL;DR: This article found that multimedia learners can integrate words and pictures more easily when the words are presented auditorily rather than visually, which is consistent with a dual-processing model of working memory consisting of separate visual and auditory channels.
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Interactive Multimodal Learning Environments Special Issue on Interactive Learning Environments: Contemporary Issues and Trends

TL;DR: In this paper, a cognitive-affective theory of learning with media from which instructional design principles are derived is presented, and a set of experimental studies in which they found empirical support for five design principles: guided activity, reflection, feedback, control and pretraining.
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The Case for Social Agency in Computer-Based Teaching: Do Students Learn More Deeply When They Interact With Animated Pedagogical Agents?

TL;DR: The authors found that students who participate in the design of plant parts remember more and transfer what they have learned to solve new problems better than students who learn the same materials without participation, regardless of whether the agent's words were presented as speech or on-screen text.