Karen A. Schriver is an American researcher in document design and information design whose work bridges rhetoric, cognitive psychology, and visual communication.
Core ideas
- Writers systematically misjudge readers: through empirical research, Schriver demonstrated that writers routinely overestimate how well readers understand their text. This isn’t fixed by “imagining a reader” — it requires protocol-aided methods like think-aloud testing [@schriver1997].
- Document design as rhetoric: typography, layout, headings, and whitespace aren’t decoration — they’re rhetorical choices that shape how readers process information. Document design and prose quality are inseparable.
- Three methods of audience analysis: Schriver distinguished classification-based (demographics), intuition-based (imagining the reader), and feedback-based (testing with real readers) methods. Only feedback-based methods reliably reveal comprehension failures.
Notable works
- Dynamics in Document Design: Creating Text for Readers (1997)
Related
- document design — the practice her work established on empirical foundations
- protocol-aided audience analysis — her method of using think-aloud protocols to study real readers
- think-aloud protocol — the research method she applied to document testing
- audience — Schriver’s research shows why abstract audience analysis fails without testing
- plain language writing — the plain language specification’s testing requirements draw on her work