The word grouping hypothesis and eye movements during reading
The word grouping hypothesis and eye movements during reading
The distribution of landing positions and durations of first fixations in a region containing a noun preceded by either an article (e.g. the soldiers) or a high-frequency three-letter word (e.g. all soldiers) were compared.
Although there were fewer first fixations on the blank space between the high-frequency three-letter word and the noun than on the surrounding letters (and the fixations on the blank space were shorter), this pattern did not occur when the noun was preceded by an article.
Radach (1996) inferred from a similar experiment that did not manipulate the type of short word that two words could be processed as a perceptual unit during reading when the first word is a short word. As this different pattern of fixations is restricted to article- noun pairs, it indicates that word grouping does not occur purely on the basis of word length during reading; moreover, as we demonstrate, one can explain the observed patterns in both conditions more parsimoniously, without adopting a word grouping mechanism in eye movement control during reading.
word grouping, fixation location distributions, word skipping
1552-1560
Drieghe, Denis
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Pollatsek, Alexander
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Staub, Adrian
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Rayner, Keith
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November 2008
Drieghe, Denis
dfe41922-1cea-47f4-904b-26d5c9fe85ce
Pollatsek, Alexander
63e93bd7-111e-4338-b922-9c5c0e6ba467
Staub, Adrian
db5cb0a9-0599-4682-8e5a-17a5c630f373
Rayner, Keith
15f4ff90-d631-457b-a055-3944b702ea27
Drieghe, Denis, Pollatsek, Alexander, Staub, Adrian and Rayner, Keith
(2008)
The word grouping hypothesis and eye movements during reading.
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 34 (6), .
(doi:10.1037/a0013017).
Abstract
The distribution of landing positions and durations of first fixations in a region containing a noun preceded by either an article (e.g. the soldiers) or a high-frequency three-letter word (e.g. all soldiers) were compared.
Although there were fewer first fixations on the blank space between the high-frequency three-letter word and the noun than on the surrounding letters (and the fixations on the blank space were shorter), this pattern did not occur when the noun was preceded by an article.
Radach (1996) inferred from a similar experiment that did not manipulate the type of short word that two words could be processed as a perceptual unit during reading when the first word is a short word. As this different pattern of fixations is restricted to article- noun pairs, it indicates that word grouping does not occur purely on the basis of word length during reading; moreover, as we demonstrate, one can explain the observed patterns in both conditions more parsimoniously, without adopting a word grouping mechanism in eye movement control during reading.
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Drieghe,_Pollatsek,_Staub,_&_Rayner_(2008).pdf
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Published date: November 2008
Keywords:
word grouping, fixation location distributions, word skipping
Organisations:
Cognition
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Local EPrints ID: 144743
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/144743
ISSN: 0278-7393
PURE UUID: 4c20cf7f-21a5-46b4-8e8f-0b6e5dcacd31
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Date deposited: 15 Apr 2010 08:05
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:55
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Author:
Alexander Pollatsek
Author:
Adrian Staub
Author:
Keith Rayner
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