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An inhibitory influence of transposed letter neighbors on eye movements during reading

An inhibitory influence of transposed letter neighbors on eye movements during reading
An inhibitory influence of transposed letter neighbors on eye movements during reading
Previous research has shown that prior exposure to a word’s substitution neighbor earlier in the same sentence can disrupt processing of that word, indicating that interword lexical priming occurs naturally during reading, due to the competition between lexical candidates during word identification. Through the present research, we extended these findings by investigating the effects of prior exposure to a word’s transposed-letter neighbor (TLN) earlier in a sentence. TLNs are constituted from the same letters, but in different orders. The findings revealed an inhibitory TLN effect, with longer total reading times for target words, and increased regressions to prime and target words, when the target followed a TLN rather than a control word. These findings indicate that prior exposure to a TLN can disrupt word identification during reading. We suggest that this is caused by a failure of word identification, due to the initial misidentification of the target word (potentially as its TLN) triggering postlexical checking.
eye movements, reading, psycholinguistics
278-284
Pagan, A.
884fbea0-cae4-4a5f-a026-baebb158c5b2
Paterson, K.B.
d0490bb9-a002-4b1b-b474-6d42c84177ff
Blythe, Hazel I.
51835633-e40b-4e8b-ae49-ad6b2f927f4c
Liversedge, Simon P.
3ebda3f3-d930-4f89-85d5-5654d8fe7dee
Pagan, A.
884fbea0-cae4-4a5f-a026-baebb158c5b2
Paterson, K.B.
d0490bb9-a002-4b1b-b474-6d42c84177ff
Blythe, Hazel I.
51835633-e40b-4e8b-ae49-ad6b2f927f4c
Liversedge, Simon P.
3ebda3f3-d930-4f89-85d5-5654d8fe7dee

Pagan, A., Paterson, K.B., Blythe, Hazel I. and Liversedge, Simon P. (2016) An inhibitory influence of transposed letter neighbors on eye movements during reading. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 23 (1), 278-284. (doi:10.3758/s13423-015-0869-5).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Previous research has shown that prior exposure to a word’s substitution neighbor earlier in the same sentence can disrupt processing of that word, indicating that interword lexical priming occurs naturally during reading, due to the competition between lexical candidates during word identification. Through the present research, we extended these findings by investigating the effects of prior exposure to a word’s transposed-letter neighbor (TLN) earlier in a sentence. TLNs are constituted from the same letters, but in different orders. The findings revealed an inhibitory TLN effect, with longer total reading times for target words, and increased regressions to prime and target words, when the target followed a TLN rather than a control word. These findings indicate that prior exposure to a TLN can disrupt word identification during reading. We suggest that this is caused by a failure of word identification, due to the initial misidentification of the target word (potentially as its TLN) triggering postlexical checking.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 2 June 2015
Published date: February 2016
Keywords: eye movements, reading, psycholinguistics

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Local EPrints ID: 378277
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/378277
PURE UUID: 1ab5f008-2bd2-434a-b3d4-646ae20fdf8b

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Date deposited: 29 Jun 2015 13:24
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 20:20

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Contributors

Author: A. Pagan
Author: K.B. Paterson
Author: Hazel I. Blythe
Author: Simon P. Liversedge

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