Multimedia Learning
The cognitive theory that people learn more effectively from words and pictures together than from words alone. According to Richard Mayer's cognitive theory of multimedia learning, working memory processes information through separate visual and auditory channels simultaneously. This creates an inherent disadvantage for deaf learners, who must receive both verbal (via interpreter or captions) and visual (slides, graphics) information through the visual channel alone, potentially overloading their cognitive capacity.
Category: cognitive accessibility · education
Related: Cognitive load · Split-Attention Effect