Immediate and delayed effects of word frequency and word length on eye movements in reading: a reversed delayed effect of word length
Immediate and delayed effects of word frequency and word length on eye movements in reading: a reversed delayed effect of word length
Three experiments examined the effects in sentence reading of varying the frequency and length of an adjective on (a) fixations on the adjective and (b) fixations on the following noun. The gaze duration on the adjective was longer for low frequency than for high frequency adjectives and longer for long adjectives than for short adjectives. This contrasted with the spillover effects: Gaze durations on the noun were longer when adjectives were low frequency but were actually shorter when the adjectives were long. The latter effect, which seems anomalous, can be explained by three mechanisms: (a) Fixations on the noun are less optimal after short adjectives because of less optimal targeting; (b) shorter adjectives are more difficult to process because they have more neighbors; and (c) prior fixations before skips are less advantageous places to extract parafoveal information. The viability of these hypotheses as explanations of this reverse length effect on the noun was examined in simulations using an updated version of the E-Z Reader model (A. Pollatsek, K. Reichle, & E. D. Rayner, 2006c; E. D. Reichle, A. Pollatsek, D. L. Fisher, & K. Rayner, 1998).
726-750
Pollatsek, Alexander
63e93bd7-111e-4338-b922-9c5c0e6ba467
Juhasz, Barbara J.
336e965b-1205-4c44-8089-318f7a2bedfe
Reichle, Erik D.
44dc4e6a-e5e2-47c5-9a09-2ef759db0583
Machacek, Debra
79c5e54e-da5d-4ff6-868c-ddbc40742c55
Rayner, Keith
15f4ff90-d631-457b-a055-3944b702ea27
June 2008
Pollatsek, Alexander
63e93bd7-111e-4338-b922-9c5c0e6ba467
Juhasz, Barbara J.
336e965b-1205-4c44-8089-318f7a2bedfe
Reichle, Erik D.
44dc4e6a-e5e2-47c5-9a09-2ef759db0583
Machacek, Debra
79c5e54e-da5d-4ff6-868c-ddbc40742c55
Rayner, Keith
15f4ff90-d631-457b-a055-3944b702ea27
Pollatsek, Alexander, Juhasz, Barbara J., Reichle, Erik D., Machacek, Debra and Rayner, Keith
(2008)
Immediate and delayed effects of word frequency and word length on eye movements in reading: a reversed delayed effect of word length.
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 34 (3), .
(doi:10.1037/0096-1523.34.3.726).
(PMID:18505334)
Abstract
Three experiments examined the effects in sentence reading of varying the frequency and length of an adjective on (a) fixations on the adjective and (b) fixations on the following noun. The gaze duration on the adjective was longer for low frequency than for high frequency adjectives and longer for long adjectives than for short adjectives. This contrasted with the spillover effects: Gaze durations on the noun were longer when adjectives were low frequency but were actually shorter when the adjectives were long. The latter effect, which seems anomalous, can be explained by three mechanisms: (a) Fixations on the noun are less optimal after short adjectives because of less optimal targeting; (b) shorter adjectives are more difficult to process because they have more neighbors; and (c) prior fixations before skips are less advantageous places to extract parafoveal information. The viability of these hypotheses as explanations of this reverse length effect on the noun was examined in simulations using an updated version of the E-Z Reader model (A. Pollatsek, K. Reichle, & E. D. Rayner, 2006c; E. D. Reichle, A. Pollatsek, D. L. Fisher, & K. Rayner, 1998).
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Published date: June 2008
Organisations:
Psychology
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Local EPrints ID: 348436
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/348436
ISSN: 0096-1523
PURE UUID: c2ee4e27-06d0-4165-86d8-96020efdb102
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Date deposited: 13 Feb 2013 11:13
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 13:00
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Author:
Alexander Pollatsek
Author:
Barbara J. Juhasz
Author:
Erik D. Reichle
Author:
Debra Machacek
Author:
Keith Rayner
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