FOERTSCH, J., & GERNSBACHER, M. A. (1994). In search
of complete comprehension: Getting "minimalists" to
work. Discourse Processes, 18, 271-296.
Three experiments illustrated that readers will not completely
comprehend the sentences they read unless sufficiently motivated
by situational demands. Complete comprehension of a topic is defined
as the ability to accurately redescribe that topic in one's own
words, and it entails three separate yet interdependent processing
tasks: (a) activating the information contained in a topic, (b)
resolving the topic as a new topic or as an anaphor referring
to an old topic, (c) modifying one's mental structures to organize
the additional information that is received. Each process hinges
on the outcome of those that preceded it, and comprehenders are
not expected to initiate the next process in the sequence unless
it is required or motivated by the task demands. To test these
predictions, three experiments were conducted in which participants
were prompted to engage in one, two, or all three comprehension
processes after reading two-clause conjunctive sentences. The
results suggested that experimental participants had a strategy
of minimal task satisfaction: They did not resolve anaphors, build
structures or draw inferences unless it was necessary for the
completion of the experiment.