Walter Kintsch

Walter Kintsch (May 30, 1932 – March 24, 2023) was an American psychologist and academic who was professor emeritus of Psychology at the University of Colorado Boulder (United States). He was renowned for his groundbreaking theories in cognitive psychology, especially in relation to text comprehension.

Biography
Walter Kintsch was born in Timișoara, raised in Austria and received his PhD at the University of Kansas in 1960. He died on March 24, 2023, at the age of 90.

Research
His research focus has been on the study of how people understand language, using both experimental methods and computational modeling techniques. He formulated a psychological process theory of discourse comprehension that views comprehension as a bottom-up process in which various alternatives are explored in parallel, resulting in an incoherent intermediate mental representation that is then cleaned up by an integration process. Integration is a constraint satisfaction process that ensures that those constructions that are linked together become strongly activated, whereas contradictory and irrelevant elements become deactivated. Kintsch details the Construction-Integration (CI) model in Comprehension: A Paradigm for Cognition.

Awards

 * In 1992 he won the APA Award for Distinguished Scientific Contributions to Psychology.
 * He is honored by the Federation of Associations in Behavioral & Brain Sciences as one of the "scientists who have made important and lasting contributions to the sciences of mind, brain, and behavior".
 * He was awarded an honorary doctorate from the Humboldt University in Berlin in 2001.

Selected publications

 * Learning, Memory and Conceptual Processes, Wiley, 1972, (ISBN 978-0471480716)
 * Memory and Cognition, Wiley, 1977, (ISBN 978-0471480723)
 * Comprehension: A Paradigm for Cognition, Cambridge University Press, 1998, (ISBN 978-0521629867)
 * The Representation of Meaning in Memory, Erlbaum, 1974. Reprinted, Routledge 2014, Kindle eBook, 2014
 * Comprehension: A Paradigm for Cognition, Cambridge University Press, 1998, (ISBN 978-0521629867)
 * The Representation of Meaning in Memory, Erlbaum, 1974. Reprinted, Routledge 2014, Kindle eBook, 2014