Eye movements when reading disappearing text: Is there a gap effect in reading?
Eye movements when reading disappearing text: Is there a gap effect in reading?
Readers’ eye movements were monitored when they read either normal sentences or sentences with masked or disappearing text (in which the fixated word disappeared or was masked after 60 ms). The goals of the research were to investigate (1) whether a gap effect occurred in reading and (2) the influence of linguistic and visual factors on oculomotor control. The results of a number of global analyses of eye movements under disappearing text conditions clearly demonstrated that there is no gap effect in reading. However, comparative analyses across a number of local measures in the experiments indicated that cognitive/lexical processes, as well as the continual uptake of visual information, influence eye movement control during reading. A persistent visual object throughout fixation caused refixations and even when a fixated word had disappeared (or been masked), there were significant effects of word frequency and word length.
1013-1024
Liversedge, Simon.P.
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Rayner, Keith.
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White, Sarah.J.
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Vergilino-Perez, Dorine.
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Findlay, John.M.
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Kentridge, Robert.
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May 2004
Liversedge, Simon.P.
3ebda3f3-d930-4f89-85d5-5654d8fe7dee
Rayner, Keith.
8a888795-4994-40f9-b908-41347d257ad2
White, Sarah.J.
38a313eb-8f07-4c5e-af36-10044136d5e3
Vergilino-Perez, Dorine.
716e33ec-dc51-413e-8542-cfbc7ef837af
Findlay, John.M.
ba7b7ec0-18ba-4e9d-bb1a-ab3a2596a450
Kentridge, Robert.
c8ad1c1d-f348-4066-a559-35f723866fcc
Liversedge, Simon.P., Rayner, Keith., White, Sarah.J., Vergilino-Perez, Dorine., Findlay, John.M. and Kentridge, Robert.
(2004)
Eye movements when reading disappearing text: Is there a gap effect in reading?
Vision Research, 44 (10), .
(doi:10.1016/j.visres.2003.12.002).
Abstract
Readers’ eye movements were monitored when they read either normal sentences or sentences with masked or disappearing text (in which the fixated word disappeared or was masked after 60 ms). The goals of the research were to investigate (1) whether a gap effect occurred in reading and (2) the influence of linguistic and visual factors on oculomotor control. The results of a number of global analyses of eye movements under disappearing text conditions clearly demonstrated that there is no gap effect in reading. However, comparative analyses across a number of local measures in the experiments indicated that cognitive/lexical processes, as well as the continual uptake of visual information, influence eye movement control during reading. A persistent visual object throughout fixation caused refixations and even when a fixated word had disappeared (or been masked), there were significant effects of word frequency and word length.
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Published date: May 2004
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Local EPrints ID: 55539
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/55539
ISSN: 0042-6989
PURE UUID: dc726e7a-8247-4444-bbcc-d3b8a2220c3a
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Date deposited: 01 Aug 2008
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 10:56
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Contributors
Author:
Simon.P. Liversedge
Author:
Keith. Rayner
Author:
Sarah.J. White
Author:
Dorine. Vergilino-Perez
Author:
John.M. Findlay
Author:
Robert. Kentridge
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