Effects of word frequency and visual complexity on eye movements of young and older Chinese readers
Effects of word frequency and visual complexity on eye movements of young and older Chinese readers
Research using alphabetic languages shows that, compared to young adults, older adults employ a risky reading strategy in which they are more likely to guess word identities and skip words to compensate for their slower processing of text. However, little is known about how ageing affects reading behaviour for naturally unspaced, logographic languages like Chinese. Accordingly, to assess the generality of age-related changes in reading strategy across different writing systems we undertook an eye movement investigation of adult age differences in Chinese reading. Participants read sentences containing a target word (a single Chinese character) that had a high or low frequency of usage and was constructed from either few or many character strokes, and so either visually simple or complex. Frequency and complexity produced similar patterns of influence for both age-groups on skipping rates and fixation times for target words. Both groups therefore demonstrated sensitivity to these manipulations. But compared to the young adults, the older adults made more and longer fixations and more forward and backward eye movements overall. They also fixated the target words for longer, especially when these were visually complex. Crucially, the older adults skipped words less and made shorter progressive saccades. Therefore, in contrast with findings for alphabetic languages, older Chinese readers appear to use a careful reading strategy according to which they move their eyes cautiously along lines of text and skip words infrequently. We propose they use this more careful reading strategy to compensate for increased difficulty processing word boundaries in Chinese.
ageing, eye movements, word frequency, visual complexity, chinese reading
1-40
Zang, Chuanli
558104ed-4ec2-48f7-b723-8bd025399803
Zhang, Manman
3a680aa0-fe35-402f-aa5e-7cae1a7f8fe2
Bai, Xuejun
721d6175-84ba-435e-acfd-3d53ad941edd
Yan, Guoli
e893614c-2061-4933-a295-8aa5f7f4f4b9
Paterson, Kevin B.
4da4f2c5-542a-4a64-9b7e-f4f8380a60e1
Liversedge, Simon P.
3ebda3f3-d930-4f89-85d5-5654d8fe7dee
1 July 2016
Zang, Chuanli
558104ed-4ec2-48f7-b723-8bd025399803
Zhang, Manman
3a680aa0-fe35-402f-aa5e-7cae1a7f8fe2
Bai, Xuejun
721d6175-84ba-435e-acfd-3d53ad941edd
Yan, Guoli
e893614c-2061-4933-a295-8aa5f7f4f4b9
Paterson, Kevin B.
4da4f2c5-542a-4a64-9b7e-f4f8380a60e1
Liversedge, Simon P.
3ebda3f3-d930-4f89-85d5-5654d8fe7dee
Zang, Chuanli, Zhang, Manman, Bai, Xuejun, Yan, Guoli, Paterson, Kevin B. and Liversedge, Simon P.
(2016)
Effects of word frequency and visual complexity on eye movements of young and older Chinese readers.
Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, .
(doi:10.1080/17470218.2015.1083594).
(PMID:26366620)
Abstract
Research using alphabetic languages shows that, compared to young adults, older adults employ a risky reading strategy in which they are more likely to guess word identities and skip words to compensate for their slower processing of text. However, little is known about how ageing affects reading behaviour for naturally unspaced, logographic languages like Chinese. Accordingly, to assess the generality of age-related changes in reading strategy across different writing systems we undertook an eye movement investigation of adult age differences in Chinese reading. Participants read sentences containing a target word (a single Chinese character) that had a high or low frequency of usage and was constructed from either few or many character strokes, and so either visually simple or complex. Frequency and complexity produced similar patterns of influence for both age-groups on skipping rates and fixation times for target words. Both groups therefore demonstrated sensitivity to these manipulations. But compared to the young adults, the older adults made more and longer fixations and more forward and backward eye movements overall. They also fixated the target words for longer, especially when these were visually complex. Crucially, the older adults skipped words less and made shorter progressive saccades. Therefore, in contrast with findings for alphabetic languages, older Chinese readers appear to use a careful reading strategy according to which they move their eyes cautiously along lines of text and skip words infrequently. We propose they use this more careful reading strategy to compensate for increased difficulty processing word boundaries in Chinese.
Text
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- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 14 July 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: July 2016
Published date: 1 July 2016
Keywords:
ageing, eye movements, word frequency, visual complexity, chinese reading
Organisations:
Psychology
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 383089
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/383089
ISSN: 1747-0218
PURE UUID: 7ee088d8-1547-4691-b8e0-29b4ccdfdab7
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Date deposited: 27 Oct 2015 16:03
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 21:38
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Contributors
Author:
Chuanli Zang
Author:
Manman Zhang
Author:
Xuejun Bai
Author:
Guoli Yan
Author:
Kevin B. Paterson
Author:
Simon P. Liversedge
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