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Géry d'Ydewalle

Researcher at Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

Publications -  185
Citations -  4658

Géry d'Ydewalle is an academic researcher from Katholieke Universiteit Leuven. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cognition & Modus tollens. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 185 publications receiving 4467 citations. Previous affiliations of Géry d'Ydewalle include The Catholic University of America.

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Perceptual effects of scene context on object identification.

TL;DR: A review of the evidence is offered to demonstrate that the observed scene-context effects may be the product of post-perceptual and task-dependent guessing strategies, and to indicate that the context directly affects the ease of perceptual object processing.
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Watching Subtitled Television: Automatic Reading Behavior.

TL;DR: This paper found that despite their lack of familiarity with subtitles, American subjects watched an American movie with English subtitles, they spent considerable time in the subtitled area, and they also looked extensively at the subtitles, suggesting that reading subtitles is preferred because of efficiency in following and understanding.
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Eye movement control during reading: foveal load and parafoveal processing.

TL;DR: Detailed analyses showed that the eye movement programming deadline hypothesis could not account for the finding that the parafoveal preview benefit is smaller with a low-frequency word in foveal vision, and results are more in line with parallel processing limited by the extent to which the parfoveal word processing on fixation n can be combined with the foveAL word processingon fixation n+1.
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Incidental foreign-language acquisition by children watching subtitled television programs.

TL;DR: Real but limited foreign-language acquisition is obtained and in contrast to the sensitive language-acquisition hypothesis, the learning of the children was not superior to that of adults investigated in prior studies.
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A dual-process specification of causal conditional reasoning

TL;DR: In this article, a dual-process theory was proposed to combine the probabilistic and the mental models accounts of causal conditional reasoning, and the results of experiments showed that the results were best predicted by the variation in likelihood information and counterexample information.