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Journal ArticleDOI

Eye movements and display change detection during reading.

TLDR
Results indicate that sensitivity to display changes was related to how close the eyes were to the invalid preview on the fixation prior to the display change, as well as the timing of the completion of this change relative to the start of the post-change fixation.
Abstract
In the boundary change paradigm (Rayner, 1975), when a reader's eyes cross an invisible boundary location, a preview word is replaced by a target word. Readers are generally unaware of such changes due to saccadic suppression. However, some readers detect changes on a few trials and a small percentage of them detect many changes. Two experiments are reported in which we combined eye movement data with signal detection analyses to investigate display change detection. On each trial, readers had to indicate if they saw a display change in addition to reading for meaning. On half the trials the display change occurred during the saccade (immediate condition); on the other half, it was slowed by 15-25 ms (delay condition) to increase the likelihood that a change would be detected. Sentences were presented in an alternating case fashion allowing us to investigate the influence of both letter identity and case. In the immediate condition, change detection was higher when letters changed than when case changed corroborating findings that word processing utilizes abstract (case independent) letter identities. However, in the delay condition (where d' was much higher than the immediate condition), detection was equal for letter and case changes. The results of both experiments indicate that sensitivity to display changes was related to how close the eyes were to the invalid preview on the fixation prior to the display change, as well as the timing of the completion of this change relative to the start of the post-change fixation.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Parafoveal processing in reading.

TL;DR: Research investigating how words are identified parafoveally (and foveally) in reading is summarized, and the extent to which words are processed at each of the levels of representation is summarized.
Journal ArticleDOI

So Much to Read, So Little Time How Do We Read, and Can Speed Reading Help?

TL;DR: The research shows that there is a trade-off between speed and accuracy, and the way to maintain high comprehension and get through text faster is to practice reading and to become a more skilled language user (e.g., through increased vocabulary).
Journal ArticleDOI

Semantic preview benefit during reading.

TL;DR: Semantic preview benefits were greater for pretarget fixations closer to the boundary and, although not as consistently, for long pretarget fixation durations (long preview time).
Journal ArticleDOI

Trans-saccadic parafoveal preview benefits in fluent reading: a study with fixation-related brain potentials.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that neural responses to words are substantially altered by parafoveal preprocessing under normal reading conditions and no evidence that word meaning contributes to these effects is found.
Journal ArticleDOI

Eye tracking: A comprehensive guide to methods and measures

TL;DR: This book is an instruction manual for the would-be researcher, offering answers to a host of critical technical questions about eye movement recording, and is well worth the modest purchase price.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Eye movements in reading and information processing: 20 years of research.

TL;DR: The basic theme of the review is that eye movement data reflect moment-to-moment cognitive processes in the various tasks examined.
Book

Detection Theory: A User's Guide

TL;DR: This book discusses Detection and Discrimination of Compound Stimuli: Tools for Multidimensional Detection Theory and Multi-Interval Discrimination Designs and Adaptive Methods for Estimating Empirical Thresholds.
Book

Analyzing linguistic data : a practical introduction to statistics using R

TL;DR: This paper presents a meta-modelling framework for modeling mixed models of clustering, classification, and probability distributions using the 'R' programming language.
Journal ArticleDOI

Eye movements and attention in reading, scene perception, and visual search.

TL;DR: Research on the following topics is reviewed with respect to reading: (a) the perceptual span, (or span of effective vision), (b) preview benefit, (c) eye movement control, and (d) models of eye movements.
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