A think-aloud protocol is a research method in which participants verbalize their thoughts while performing a task — reading a document, writing a text, or solving a problem — so researchers can observe cognitive processes that are normally invisible.
Linda Flower and John Hayes used think-aloud protocols to develop the cognitive process model of writing, revealing that composing is recursive rather than linear — writers plan, draft, and revise in interleaving cycles, not in the prewrite-write-revise sequence that writing pedagogy had assumed [@flowerhayes1981]. Their protocol data showed what actually happens when people write, not what they report afterward.
Karen Schriver extended the method to document testing, developing protocol-aided audience analysis. By watching readers think aloud while using a document, writers can identify exactly where comprehension breaks down — something that self-report surveys miss, because readers often don’t know what they misunderstood [@schriver1997].
Think-aloud protocols are central to the vault’s approach to writing for two reasons:
- As evidence for writing principles. The vault’s rules about revision, writer-based prose, and cognitive load rest on protocol research, not intuition.
- As a testing method. The plain language specification’s paraphrase test (section 12.2) and task test (section 12.3) are simplified versions of protocol-aided testing.
Related terms
- protocol-aided audience analysis — Schriver’s application of think-aloud protocols to document testing
- revision — Flower and Hayes used think-aloud protocols to show that revision is recursive
- audience — protocol data reveals how real readers process documents