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Bernhard Angele

Researcher at Bournemouth University

Publications -  33
Citations -  1241

Bernhard Angele is an academic researcher from Bournemouth University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Reading (process) & Sentence. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 32 publications receiving 1041 citations. Previous affiliations of Bernhard Angele include University of California, San Diego & University of California, Berkeley.

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The effect of high- and low-frequency previews and sentential fit on word skipping during reading

TL;DR: It is found that the word frequency rather than the felicitousness (syntactic fit) of the preview affected how often the upcoming word was skipped, which indicates that visual information about the forthcoming word trumps information from the sentence context when it comes to making a skipping decision.
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Do successor effects in reading reflect lexical parafoveal processing? Evidence from corpus-based and experimental eye movement data

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors combined a corpus analysis approach with an experimental manipulation (i.e., a parafoveal modification of the moving mask technique, Rayner & Bertera, 1979), so that, either (a) word n + 1, word n+ 2, both words, or (b) neither word was masked.
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Two stages of parafoveal processing during reading: Evidence from a display change detection task

TL;DR: Results suggest that display change detection and lexical processing do not use the same cognitive mechanisms, and it is proposed that parafoveal processing takes place in two stages: an early, orthography-based, preattentional stage, and a late, attention-dependent lexical access stage.
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Skipping syntactically illegal "the"-previews: The role of predictability

TL;DR: It appears that when a short word is predictable in context, a decision to skip it can be made even if the information available parafoveally conflicts both visually and syntactically with those predictions.
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Interword and interletter spacing effects during reading revisited: Interactions with word and font characteristics.

TL;DR: Findings from 3 experiments designed to resolve the seemingly inconsistent letter-spacing effects and provide clarity to researchers and font designers and researchers indicate that the direction of spacing effects depend on the size of the default spacing chosen by font developers.