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Does text contrast mediate binocular advantages in reading?

Does text contrast mediate binocular advantages in reading?
Does text contrast mediate binocular advantages in reading?
Humans typically make use of both of their eyes in reading and efficient processes of binocular vision provide a stable, single percept of the text. Binocular reading also comes with an advantage: reading speed is high and word frequency effects (i.e., faster lexical processing of words that are more often encountered in a language) emerge during fixations, which is not the case for monocular reading (Jainta, Blythe, & Liversedge, 2014). A potential contributor to this benefit is the reduced contrast in monocular reading: reduced text contrasts in binocular reading are known to slow down reading and word identification (Reingold & Rayner, 2006). To investigate whether contrast reduction mediates the binocular advantage, we first replicated increased reading time and nullified frequency effects for monocular reading (Experiment 1). Next, we reduced the contrast for binocular but whole sentences to 70% (Weber-contrast); this reading condition resembled monocular reading, but found no effect on reading speed and word identification (Experiment 2). A reasonable conclusion, therefore, was that a reduction in contrast is not the (primary) factor that mediates less efficient lexical processing under monocular reading. In a third experiment (Experiment 3) we reduced the sentence contrast to 40% and the pattern of results showed that, globally, reading was slowed down but clear word frequency effects were present in the data. Thus, word identification processes during reading (i.e., the word frequency effect) were qualitatively different in monocular reading compared with effects observed when text was read with substantially reduced contrast.
0096-1523
55-68
Jainta, Stephanie
ef30b7ea-1a56-4788-a3f5-092a069198a5
Nikolova, Mirela
3239f860-0285-499c-a6bd-a4532c1a0b54
Liversedge, Simon
3ebda3f3-d930-4f89-85d5-5654d8fe7dee
Jainta, Stephanie
ef30b7ea-1a56-4788-a3f5-092a069198a5
Nikolova, Mirela
3239f860-0285-499c-a6bd-a4532c1a0b54
Liversedge, Simon
3ebda3f3-d930-4f89-85d5-5654d8fe7dee

Jainta, Stephanie, Nikolova, Mirela and Liversedge, Simon (2017) Does text contrast mediate binocular advantages in reading? Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 43, 55-68. (doi:10.1037/xhp0000293).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Humans typically make use of both of their eyes in reading and efficient processes of binocular vision provide a stable, single percept of the text. Binocular reading also comes with an advantage: reading speed is high and word frequency effects (i.e., faster lexical processing of words that are more often encountered in a language) emerge during fixations, which is not the case for monocular reading (Jainta, Blythe, & Liversedge, 2014). A potential contributor to this benefit is the reduced contrast in monocular reading: reduced text contrasts in binocular reading are known to slow down reading and word identification (Reingold & Rayner, 2006). To investigate whether contrast reduction mediates the binocular advantage, we first replicated increased reading time and nullified frequency effects for monocular reading (Experiment 1). Next, we reduced the contrast for binocular but whole sentences to 70% (Weber-contrast); this reading condition resembled monocular reading, but found no effect on reading speed and word identification (Experiment 2). A reasonable conclusion, therefore, was that a reduction in contrast is not the (primary) factor that mediates less efficient lexical processing under monocular reading. In a third experiment (Experiment 3) we reduced the sentence contrast to 40% and the pattern of results showed that, globally, reading was slowed down but clear word frequency effects were present in the data. Thus, word identification processes during reading (i.e., the word frequency effect) were qualitatively different in monocular reading compared with effects observed when text was read with substantially reduced contrast.

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Does text contrast mediate binocular advantages in reading? - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 1 July 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 31 October 2016
Published date: January 2017
Organisations: Cognition, Psychology

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 406205
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/406205
ISSN: 0096-1523
PURE UUID: d54277d9-9b0c-493f-a8f7-6e839233ae27

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Date deposited: 10 Mar 2017 10:42
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 12:29

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Contributors

Author: Stephanie Jainta
Author: Mirela Nikolova
Author: Simon Liversedge

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