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Book ChapterDOI

The Role of Letter Anatomy in Type Design: An Eye-Tracking Study of Bengali Letters

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TLDR
The result indicates that there is an active involvement of letter-parts and features in the letter identification process, and the list of common and distinctive letter features has been prepared to guide the type designers.
Abstract
The elementary unit of letter construction is the basic anatomical features of letterforms. The letter identification is a process of decoding and encoding of the anatomical information of the letters. They are the fundamental components of letter identification. This paper explains the process of Bengali letter identification and reveals the crucial anatomical features for design purposes. Here, an eye-tracking study has been conducted to identify the involvement of letter features in reading. In order to reveal the letter features, we exposed the letters under low contrast conditions to establish the consequence of anatomical features. The objective of the experiment is to identify the important letters features during the reading process that aids the letter identification task. A total number of six participants had performed the task under low contrast condition, and data was captured using an eye-tracking device. The aim of the paper is to understand the role of anatomical features in the letter identification process, so that such information can be useful for the Type designers. Type designers are designers who design typefaces and develop fonts for everyday use. The saccades, fixation, and heat-signature data from eye-tracking study have provided two major sets of information—(1) a list of letter features (individually) involved in the letter identification process, (2) a list of common and unique letter features across all Bengali letters. The result indicates that there is an active involvement of letter-parts and features in the letter identification process, and the list of common and distinctive letter features has been prepared to guide the type designers.

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Screen vs. paper: what is the difference for reading and learning?

TL;DR: Habit and attitude appeared to be important, and a digitally born textbook is by far the best alternative to a print textbook when it comes to studying, but even those who prefer to read on screens are originally native paper readers, and as long as the existing application interfaces cannot address the shortcomings of screens regarding spatial landmarks, the authors will keep returning to paper under certain circumstances.
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Using visual noise to characterize amblyopic letter identification.

TL;DR: A two-factor model of the amblyopic deficit is obtained: substantially reduced efficiency for small letters and negligibly increased cortical noise, and a new "Dual Acuity" chart is introduced that promises to be a quick diagnostic test for amblyopia.
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Effect of visual display terminal height on the trapezius muscle hardness: quantitative evaluation by a newly developed muscle hardness meter.

TL;DR: When using a desktop personal computer (PC), no change was observed in muscle hardness even after a 30-min task if a subject was in the reference posture with a declination angle formed by the Reid's line directed toward the upper edge of the PC screen and the horizontal plane within 5-10 degrees.
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Grouping in object recognition: the role of a Gestalt law in letter identification.

TL;DR: To assess grouping in object recognition, letters are made out of grating patches and the effects of three different kinds of shape perturbation on letter identifiability are predicted by a single measure of goodness of continuation, showing that letter identification obeys the Gestalt law of good continuation.