Benchmark eye movement effects during natural reading in autism spectrum disorder
Benchmark eye movement effects during natural reading in autism spectrum disorder
In 2 experiments, eye tracking methodology was used to assess on-line lexical, syntactic and semantic processing in autism spectrum disorder (ASD). In Experiment 1, lexical identification was examined by manipulating the frequency of target words. Both typically developed (TD) and ASD readers showed normal frequency effects, suggesting that the processes TD and ASD readers engage in to identify words are comparable. In Experiment 2, syntactic parsing and semantic interpretation requiring the on-line use of world knowledge were examined, by having participants read garden path sentences containing an ambiguous prepositional phrase. Both groups showed normal garden path effects when reading low-attached sentences and the time course of reading disruption was comparable between groups. This suggests that not only do ASD readers hold similar syntactic preferences to TD readers, but also that they use world knowledge on-line during reading. Together, these experiments demonstrate that the initial construction of sentence interpretation appears to be intact in ASD. However, the finding that ASD readers skip target words less often in Experiment 2, and take longer to read sentences during second pass for both experiments, suggests that they adopt a more cautious reading strategy and take longer to evaluate their sentence interpretation prior to making a manual response
109-127
Howard, Philippa
55560828-d0cb-45bb-8ea6-18f057a8a4cb
Liversedge, Simon
3ebda3f3-d930-4f89-85d5-5654d8fe7dee
Benson, Valerie
4827cede-6668-4e3d-bded-ade4cd5e5db5
January 2017
Howard, Philippa
55560828-d0cb-45bb-8ea6-18f057a8a4cb
Liversedge, Simon
3ebda3f3-d930-4f89-85d5-5654d8fe7dee
Benson, Valerie
4827cede-6668-4e3d-bded-ade4cd5e5db5
Howard, Philippa, Liversedge, Simon and Benson, Valerie
(2017)
Benchmark eye movement effects during natural reading in autism spectrum disorder.
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning Memory and Cognition, 43 (1), .
(doi:10.1037/xlm0000289).
Abstract
In 2 experiments, eye tracking methodology was used to assess on-line lexical, syntactic and semantic processing in autism spectrum disorder (ASD). In Experiment 1, lexical identification was examined by manipulating the frequency of target words. Both typically developed (TD) and ASD readers showed normal frequency effects, suggesting that the processes TD and ASD readers engage in to identify words are comparable. In Experiment 2, syntactic parsing and semantic interpretation requiring the on-line use of world knowledge were examined, by having participants read garden path sentences containing an ambiguous prepositional phrase. Both groups showed normal garden path effects when reading low-attached sentences and the time course of reading disruption was comparable between groups. This suggests that not only do ASD readers hold similar syntactic preferences to TD readers, but also that they use world knowledge on-line during reading. Together, these experiments demonstrate that the initial construction of sentence interpretation appears to be intact in ASD. However, the finding that ASD readers skip target words less often in Experiment 2, and take longer to read sentences during second pass for both experiments, suggests that they adopt a more cautious reading strategy and take longer to evaluate their sentence interpretation prior to making a manual response
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Benchmark_Revised_NoTrackChanges.docx
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Accepted/In Press date: 21 March 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: January 2017
Published date: January 2017
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This article may not exactly replicate the final version published in the APA journal. It is not the copy of record
Organisations:
Cognition
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Local EPrints ID: 396679
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/396679
ISSN: 0278-7393
PURE UUID: a3cb9764-3fee-4128-bfb0-19e31dafe83a
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Date deposited: 13 Jun 2016 13:13
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 00:57
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Author:
Philippa Howard
Author:
Simon Liversedge
Author:
Valerie Benson
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