Skip to main content
英語練習試験englishpracticeexam.com
練習テスト試験ガイド料金
ログイン新規登録
英語練習試験

English Practice Exam · englishpracticeexam.com

英語能力試験の成功をサポートする無料練習テスト。

クイックリンク

  • ホーム
  • 練習テスト
  • 料金

法的情報

  • プライバシーポリシー
  • 利用規約
  • お問い合わせ

他の言語

日本語العربيةবাংলাEnglishFrançaisગુજરાતીहिन्दीBahasa Indonesia한국어Bahasa Melayu普通话नेपालीPortuguês (Brasil)ਪੰਜਾਬੀEspañolภาษาไทยTiếng Việt

© 2025 英語練習試験. All rights reserved.

ウェブサイト制作:S-Block TechnologiesS-Block Technologies

最後の無料練習テストProにする

  1. ホーム
  2. /
  3. TOEFL
  4. /
  5. TOEFL iBT
  6. /
  7. Reading
  8. /
  9. 練習テスト
TOEFLReading

Read an Academic Passage

Read the passage and answer the questions.

0 / 5 answered
cognitive science

Working Memory and the Limits of Cognitive Load

315 words

[1]Working memory, the cognitive system responsible for temporarily holding and manipulating information, has long been recognized as a bottleneck in human thought. Research pioneered by George Miller in the 1950s suggested that people can retain approximately seven discrete items in short-term storage at any given time, though subsequent studies have revised this estimate downward to roughly four chunks of information. Understanding the constraints of working memory is essential because nearly every complex mental activity—reading, problem-solving, decision-making—depends on how efficiently this limited resource is managed.

[2]Cognitive load theory, developed by John Sweller in the 1980s, applies these findings to the design of instructional materials. The theory distinguishes among three types of load: intrinsic load, which arises from the inherent difficulty of the material; extraneous load, which results from poorly designed instruction; and germane load, which reflects the mental effort devoted to constructing lasting knowledge structures called schemas. When the combined load exceeds working memory capacity, learners experience confusion, make errors, and retain less information. Effective instruction, therefore, seeks to minimize extraneous load while directing cognitive resources toward germane processing.

[3]One practical application of cognitive load theory is the redundancy effect. When identical information is presented simultaneously through text and narration, learners must process both streams and reconcile them, which paradoxically increases cognitive demand rather than reinforcing the message. Instructional designers have responded by eliminating redundant elements and presenting complementary information across different sensory channels—for example, pairing spoken explanations with visual diagrams rather than with on-screen text that duplicates the narration.

[4]Despite its influence, cognitive load theory faces criticism for the difficulty of measuring different load types independently. Self-report questionnaires and physiological indicators such as pupil dilation offer indirect evidence, but no single measure captures all three load categories with precision. Researchers continue to refine both the theoretical framework and the measurement tools, recognizing that a deeper understanding of cognitive load could improve educational outcomes across disciplines.

1
main idea0

What is the main idea of the passage?

2
detailParagraph 2

According to paragraph 2, what happens when combined cognitive load exceeds working memory capacity?

3
vocabularyParagraph 3

The word "reconcile" in paragraph 3 is closest in meaning to:

4
inferenceParagraph 3

What can be inferred from paragraph 3 about presenting the same information as both on-screen text and narration?

5
purposeParagraph 4

Why does the author mention pupil dilation in paragraph 4?

← Read an Academic Passageの全テストに戻るTOEFL iBTの全セクションを見る

Also practice for:

CambridgeIELTSTOEICPTE Academic