Robert L. Mack, Clayton H. Lewis, et al.
ACM Transactions on Information Systems (TOIS)
Recent discussion has resolved the question of how prior knowledge organizes new learning into the technical definition and study of “metaphor”. Some theorists have adopted an “operational” approach, focusing on the manifest effects of suggesting metaphoric comparisons to learners. Some have resolved the question formally into a “structural” definition of metaphor. However, structural and operation approaches typically ignore the goal-directed learner-initiated learning process through which metaphors become relevant and effective in learning. Taking this process seriously affords an analysis of metaphor that explains why metaphors are intrinsically open-ended and how their open-endedness stimulates the construction of mental models. © 1985, Academic Press Inc. (London) Limited. All rights reserved.
Robert L. Mack, Clayton H. Lewis, et al.
ACM Transactions on Information Systems (TOIS)
John B. Black, J. Scott Bechtold, et al.
CHI 1989
John M. Carroll
Interacting with Computers
Mary Beth Rosson, John M. Carroll, et al.
CHI 1991