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Universality in eye movements and reading: a trilingual investigation

Universality in eye movements and reading: a trilingual investigation
Universality in eye movements and reading: a trilingual investigation
Universality in language has been a core issue in the fields of linguistics and psycholinguistics for many years (e.g., Chomsky, 1965). Recently, Frost (2012) has argued that establishing universals of process is critical to the development of meaningful, theoretically motivated, cross-linguistic models of reading. In contrast, other researchers argue that there is no such thing as universals of reading (e.g., Coltheart & Crain, 2012). Reading is a complex, visually mediated psychological process, and eye movements are the behavioural means by which we encode the visual information required for linguistic processing. To investigate universality of representation and process across languages we examined eye movement behaviour during reading of very comparable stimuli in three languages, Chinese, English and Finnish. These languages differ in numerous respects (character based vs. alphabetic, visual density, informational density, word spacing, orthographic depth, agglutination, etc.). We used linear mixed modelling techniques to identify variables that captured common variance across languages. Despite fundamental visual and linguistic differences in the orthographies, statistical models of reading behaviour were strikingly similar in a number of respects, and thus, we argue that their composition might reflect universality of representation and process in reading.
0010-0277
1-20
Liversedge, Simon P.
3ebda3f3-d930-4f89-85d5-5654d8fe7dee
Drieghe, Denis
dfe41922-1cea-47f4-904b-26d5c9fe85ce
Li, Xin
50870cd7-3ec3-434e-a43a-b10d50e3d5b3
Yan, Guoli
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Bai, Xuejun
721d6175-84ba-435e-acfd-3d53ad941edd
Hyönä, Jukka
393b00ca-e89d-45b7-8248-c41706accfd2
Liversedge, Simon P.
3ebda3f3-d930-4f89-85d5-5654d8fe7dee
Drieghe, Denis
dfe41922-1cea-47f4-904b-26d5c9fe85ce
Li, Xin
50870cd7-3ec3-434e-a43a-b10d50e3d5b3
Yan, Guoli
e893614c-2061-4933-a295-8aa5f7f4f4b9
Bai, Xuejun
721d6175-84ba-435e-acfd-3d53ad941edd
Hyönä, Jukka
393b00ca-e89d-45b7-8248-c41706accfd2

Liversedge, Simon P., Drieghe, Denis, Li, Xin, Yan, Guoli, Bai, Xuejun and Hyönä, Jukka (2016) Universality in eye movements and reading: a trilingual investigation. Cognition, 147, 1-20. (doi:10.1016/j.cognition.2015.10.013).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Universality in language has been a core issue in the fields of linguistics and psycholinguistics for many years (e.g., Chomsky, 1965). Recently, Frost (2012) has argued that establishing universals of process is critical to the development of meaningful, theoretically motivated, cross-linguistic models of reading. In contrast, other researchers argue that there is no such thing as universals of reading (e.g., Coltheart & Crain, 2012). Reading is a complex, visually mediated psychological process, and eye movements are the behavioural means by which we encode the visual information required for linguistic processing. To investigate universality of representation and process across languages we examined eye movement behaviour during reading of very comparable stimuli in three languages, Chinese, English and Finnish. These languages differ in numerous respects (character based vs. alphabetic, visual density, informational density, word spacing, orthographic depth, agglutination, etc.). We used linear mixed modelling techniques to identify variables that captured common variance across languages. Despite fundamental visual and linguistic differences in the orthographies, statistical models of reading behaviour were strikingly similar in a number of respects, and thus, we argue that their composition might reflect universality of representation and process in reading.

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Liversedge, Drieghe, Li, Yan, Bai, & Hyona (in press) copy.pdf - Other
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 14 October 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 19 November 2015
Published date: February 2016
Organisations: Cognition

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 382899
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/382899
ISSN: 0010-0277
PURE UUID: 58af7349-596b-4d1c-a42d-e6ab77bb43ff
ORCID for Denis Drieghe: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9630-8410

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Date deposited: 04 Nov 2015 11:16
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:34

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Contributors

Author: Simon P. Liversedge
Author: Denis Drieghe ORCID iD
Author: Xin Li
Author: Guoli Yan
Author: Xuejun Bai
Author: Jukka Hyönä

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