|
|
| Research article summary (published 28 Aug 2006): |
An influence over eye movements in reading exerted from beyond the level of the word: evidence from reading English and French.
Full Abstract
We report the results of a series of multiple regression analyses conducted on the Dundee Corpus, a corpus of eye-movement data obtained from ten British and ten French young adults as they read newspaper articles (the equivalent of more than 52,000 words per language) presented on a screen, five lines at a time. Inspection parameters (inter-word saccade latency, saccade extent, skipping probability, first fixation and gaze duration and number of fixation) were all determined in part by properties defined beyond the level of individual words, e.g., the relative or mean length of adjacent words rather than individual word length. Properties defined at this level do not feature in any current model of eye-movement control in reading. Moreover, foveal inspection time was found to vary as a function of the properties of words in the parafovea (lexical frequency for English; initial trigram informativeness for French). We account for these results by proposing a process monitoring mechanism, in which a number of visual parameters simultaneously contribute to optimize visibility over a sequence of adjacent words.
Author information
Author/s: Pynte, Joël (J); Kennedy, Alan (A);
Affiliation: CNRS and University of Provence, 29 Avenue R. Schuman, 13621 Aix-en-Provence, France. pynte(-atsign-)up.univ-aix.fr
Journal and publication information
Publication Type: Journal Article
Journal: Vision research (Vision Res), published in England. (Language: eng)
Reference: 2006-Oct; vol 46 (issue 22) : pp 3786-801
Dates: Created 2006/09/19; Completed 2007/01/18;
PMID: 16938333, status: MEDLINE (last retrieval date: 2/18/2009, IMS Date: )
Sourced from the National Library of Medicine. Abstract text and other information may be subject to copyright.
External Links for this article
(including full text providers, if available):
Click Electronic Full-text Provider Links to see options for finding the electronic full text links to this article. Note there may be a subscription or fee required for access to the full text. See our FAQ for information on finding FREE full text articles.
This article may also be located in paper journal collections available in many libraries. Use the Journal and Publication Information above to find the full article.
MeSH headings (categories)
This article was linked to the MESH Headings shown below.
Related articles
These are the highest related articles currently in the database:
- Parafoveal-on-foveal effects on eye movements in text reading: does an extra space make a difference?
30 May 2005 - Real-world visual search is dominated by top-down guidance.
24 Sep 2006 - Influence of parafoveal processing on the missing-letter effect.
30 Mar 2001 - Decision and metrics of refixations in reading isolated words.
30 Dec 2003 - Parafoveal-on-foveal effects in normal reading.
30 Dec 2004 - Foveal visual strategy during self-motion is independent of spatial attention.
9 Jan 2006 - Size of saccade and fixation duration of eye movements during reading: psychophysics of Japanese text processing.
30 Dec 1991 - Eye movements and the modulation of parafoveal processing by foveal processing difficulty: A reexamination.
29 Sep 2005 - Fixation identification in centroid versus start-point modes using eye-tracking data.
30 May 2008 - Optokinetic nystagmus elicited by a random dot pattern and a wide interval stripe pattern in normal subjects.
30 Dec 1993
Related Article Map
Legend:
- FREE Full text Article.
- Abstract only.
- Title only. More help.
See a large map of 100+ related articles.