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Inter-word spacing and landing position effects during Chinese reading in children and adults

Inter-word spacing and landing position effects during Chinese reading in children and adults
Inter-word spacing and landing position effects during Chinese reading in children and adults
The present study examined children and adults' eye movement behavior when reading word spaced and unspaced Chinese text. The results showed that interword spacing reduced children and adults' first pass reading times and refixation probabilities indicating spaces between words facilitated word identification. Word spacing effects occurred to a similar degree for both children and adults, though there were differential landing position effects for single and multiple fixation situations in both groups; clear preferred viewing location effects occurred for single fixations, whereas landing positions were closer to word beginnings, and further into the word for adults than children for multiple fixation situations. Furthermore, adults targeted refixations contingent on initial landing positions to a greater degree than did children. Overall, the results indicate that some aspects of children's eye movements during reading show similar levels of maturity to adults, while others do not.
0096-1523
720-734
Zang, Chuanli
363070c9-3bc6-4581-869b-98c5dd27dc71
Liang, Feifei
69337591-8950-48bc-9bdb-75807565ef72
Bai, Xuejun
721d6175-84ba-435e-acfd-3d53ad941edd
Yan, Guoli
e893614c-2061-4933-a295-8aa5f7f4f4b9
Liversedge, Simon P.
3ebda3f3-d930-4f89-85d5-5654d8fe7dee
Zang, Chuanli
363070c9-3bc6-4581-869b-98c5dd27dc71
Liang, Feifei
69337591-8950-48bc-9bdb-75807565ef72
Bai, Xuejun
721d6175-84ba-435e-acfd-3d53ad941edd
Yan, Guoli
e893614c-2061-4933-a295-8aa5f7f4f4b9
Liversedge, Simon P.
3ebda3f3-d930-4f89-85d5-5654d8fe7dee

Zang, Chuanli, Liang, Feifei, Bai, Xuejun, Yan, Guoli and Liversedge, Simon P. (2013) Inter-word spacing and landing position effects during Chinese reading in children and adults. Journal of Experimental Psychology Human Perception & Performance, 39 (3), 720-734. (doi:10.1037/a0030097).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The present study examined children and adults' eye movement behavior when reading word spaced and unspaced Chinese text. The results showed that interword spacing reduced children and adults' first pass reading times and refixation probabilities indicating spaces between words facilitated word identification. Word spacing effects occurred to a similar degree for both children and adults, though there were differential landing position effects for single and multiple fixation situations in both groups; clear preferred viewing location effects occurred for single fixations, whereas landing positions were closer to word beginnings, and further into the word for adults than children for multiple fixation situations. Furthermore, adults targeted refixations contingent on initial landing positions to a greater degree than did children. Overall, the results indicate that some aspects of children's eye movements during reading show similar levels of maturity to adults, while others do not.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 15 October 2012
Published date: June 2013

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 348684
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/348684
ISSN: 0096-1523
PURE UUID: f64fc64a-501a-4189-bbda-ab9b6f3ffae2

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Date deposited: 18 Feb 2013 13:04
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 13:03

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Contributors

Author: Chuanli Zang
Author: Feifei Liang
Author: Xuejun Bai
Author: Guoli Yan
Author: Simon P. Liversedge

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