The effect of word frequency and parafoveal preview on saccade length during the reading of Chinese
The effect of word frequency and parafoveal preview on saccade length during the reading of Chinese
There are currently 2 theoretical accounts of how readers of Chinese select their saccade targets: (a) by moving their eyes to specific saccade targets (i.e., the default-targeting hypothesis) and (b) by adjusting their saccade lengths to accommodate lexical processing (i.e., the dynamic-adjustment hypothesis). In this article, we first report the results of an eye-movement experiment using a gaze-contingent boundary paradigm. This experiment demonstrates that both target-word frequency and its preview validity modulate the lengths of the saccades entering and exiting the target words, with longer saccades to/from high-frequency words when their preview was available. We then report the results of 2 simulations using computational models that instantiate the core theoretical assumptions of the default-targeting and dynamic-adjustment hypotheses. Comparisons of these simulations indicate that the dynamic-adjustment hypothesis provides a better quantitative account of the data from our experiment using fewer free parameters. We conclude by discussing evidence for dynamic saccade adjustment during the reading of alphabetic languages, and why such a heuristic may be necessary to fully explain eye-movement control during the reading of both alphabetic and nonalphabetic languages
1008-1025
Liu, Yanping
7cc20ffb-b466-4b9a-8884-e9af58f66746
Reichle, Erik
44dc4e6a-e5e2-47c5-9a09-2ef759db0583
Li, Xingshan
e49f2ca9-3388-4e93-9b40-c57e125f221a
July 2016
Liu, Yanping
7cc20ffb-b466-4b9a-8884-e9af58f66746
Reichle, Erik
44dc4e6a-e5e2-47c5-9a09-2ef759db0583
Li, Xingshan
e49f2ca9-3388-4e93-9b40-c57e125f221a
Liu, Yanping, Reichle, Erik and Li, Xingshan
(2016)
The effect of word frequency and parafoveal preview on saccade length during the reading of Chinese.
Journal of Experimental Psychology Human Perception & Performance, 42 (7), .
(doi:10.1037/xhp0000190).
Abstract
There are currently 2 theoretical accounts of how readers of Chinese select their saccade targets: (a) by moving their eyes to specific saccade targets (i.e., the default-targeting hypothesis) and (b) by adjusting their saccade lengths to accommodate lexical processing (i.e., the dynamic-adjustment hypothesis). In this article, we first report the results of an eye-movement experiment using a gaze-contingent boundary paradigm. This experiment demonstrates that both target-word frequency and its preview validity modulate the lengths of the saccades entering and exiting the target words, with longer saccades to/from high-frequency words when their preview was available. We then report the results of 2 simulations using computational models that instantiate the core theoretical assumptions of the default-targeting and dynamic-adjustment hypotheses. Comparisons of these simulations indicate that the dynamic-adjustment hypothesis provides a better quantitative account of the data from our experiment using fewer free parameters. We conclude by discussing evidence for dynamic saccade adjustment during the reading of alphabetic languages, and why such a heuristic may be necessary to fully explain eye-movement control during the reading of both alphabetic and nonalphabetic languages
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Accepted/In Press date: 15 November 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 25 January 2016
Published date: July 2016
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 401723
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/401723
ISSN: 0096-1523
PURE UUID: f61e4585-4d05-4130-9359-996df2c64607
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Date deposited: 20 Oct 2016 12:48
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 02:54
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Author:
Yanping Liu
Author:
Erik Reichle
Author:
Xingshan Li
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