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Investigating the causes of wrap-up effects: evidence from eye movements and E–Z Reader

Investigating the causes of wrap-up effects: evidence from eye movements and E–Z Reader
Investigating the causes of wrap-up effects: evidence from eye movements and E–Z Reader
Wrap-up effects in reading have traditionally been thought to reflect increased processing associated with intra- and inter-clause integration (Just, M. A. & Carpenter, P. A. (1980). A theory of reading: From eye fixations to comprehension. Psychological Review,87(4), 329-354; Rayner, K., Kambe, G., & Duffy, S. A. (2000). The effect of clause wrap-up on eye movements during reading. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology,53A(4), 1061-1080; cf. Hirotani, M., Frazier, L., & Rayner, K. (2006). Punctuation and intonation effects on clause and sentence wrap-up: Evidence from eye movements. Journal of Memory and Language,54, 425-443). We report an eye-tracking experiment with a strong manipulation of integrative complexity at a critical word that was either sentence-final, ended a comma-marked clause, or was not comma-marked. Although both complexity and punctuation had reliable effects, they did not interact in any eye-movement measure. These results as well as simulations using the E-Z Reader model of eye-movement control (Reichle, E. D., Warren, T., & McConnell, K. (2009). Using E-Z Reader to model the effects of higher-level language processing on eye movements during reading. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review,16(1), 1-20) suggest that traditional accounts of clause wrap-up are incomplete.
sentence comprehension, eye tracking, language processing, computational modeling, clause wrap-up
0010-0277
132-137
Warren, Tessa
e2c141b9-2ea5-4491-b8e2-423559eea925
White, Sarah J.
6691e495-5b54-40f7-b75b-012f77e5a493
Reichle, Erik D.
44dc4e6a-e5e2-47c5-9a09-2ef759db0583
Warren, Tessa
e2c141b9-2ea5-4491-b8e2-423559eea925
White, Sarah J.
6691e495-5b54-40f7-b75b-012f77e5a493
Reichle, Erik D.
44dc4e6a-e5e2-47c5-9a09-2ef759db0583

Warren, Tessa, White, Sarah J. and Reichle, Erik D. (2009) Investigating the causes of wrap-up effects: evidence from eye movements and E–Z Reader. Cognition, 111 (1), 132-137. (doi:10.1016/j.cognition.2008.12.011). (PMID:19215911)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Wrap-up effects in reading have traditionally been thought to reflect increased processing associated with intra- and inter-clause integration (Just, M. A. & Carpenter, P. A. (1980). A theory of reading: From eye fixations to comprehension. Psychological Review,87(4), 329-354; Rayner, K., Kambe, G., & Duffy, S. A. (2000). The effect of clause wrap-up on eye movements during reading. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology,53A(4), 1061-1080; cf. Hirotani, M., Frazier, L., & Rayner, K. (2006). Punctuation and intonation effects on clause and sentence wrap-up: Evidence from eye movements. Journal of Memory and Language,54, 425-443). We report an eye-tracking experiment with a strong manipulation of integrative complexity at a critical word that was either sentence-final, ended a comma-marked clause, or was not comma-marked. Although both complexity and punctuation had reliable effects, they did not interact in any eye-movement measure. These results as well as simulations using the E-Z Reader model of eye-movement control (Reichle, E. D., Warren, T., & McConnell, K. (2009). Using E-Z Reader to model the effects of higher-level language processing on eye movements during reading. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review,16(1), 1-20) suggest that traditional accounts of clause wrap-up are incomplete.

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More information

Published date: April 2009
Keywords: sentence comprehension, eye tracking, language processing, computational modeling, clause wrap-up
Organisations: Psychology

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 348435
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/348435
ISSN: 0010-0277
PURE UUID: 2d432fc2-cf43-4d80-9d33-5fd9bbf9605c

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Date deposited: 13 Feb 2013 11:06
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 13:00

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Contributors

Author: Tessa Warren
Author: Sarah J. White
Author: Erik D. Reichle

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