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Reading sentences of words with rotated letters: an eye movement study
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Reading sentences of words with rotated letters: An eye movement study ...
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Reading sentences of words with rotated letters: An eye movement study ...
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4
Reading transposed text: effects of transposed letter distance and consonant-vowel status on eye movements
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5
Reading transposed text: effects of transposed letter distance and consonant-vowel status on eye movements
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6
Eye movements during Chinese reading
In: Journal of research in reading. - Leeds : Wiley-Blackwell 36 (2013) 1, S1
OLC Linguistik
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7
Using E-Z Reader to examine the concurrent development of eye-movement control and reading skill
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Using E-Z Reader to examine the concurrent development of eye-movement control and reading skill
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9
Using stroke removal to investigate Chinese character identification during reading: evidence from eye movements
In: Reading and writing. - New York, NY : Springer Science+Business Media 25 (2012) 5, 951-979
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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10
Eye movements and word skipping during reading: Effects of word length and predictability
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11
Eye movements and word skipping during reading: effects of word length and predictability
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12
Linguistic and cognitive influences on eye movements during reading
Liversedge, Simon P.; Rayner, Keith. - : Oxford University Press, 2011
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13
Encoding multiple words simultaneously in reading is implausible
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14
Reading Spaced and Unspaced Chinese Text: Evidence From Eye Movements
Abstract: Native Chinese readers’ eye movements were monitored as they read text that did or did not demark word boundary information. In Experiment 1, sentences had 4 types of spacing: normal unspaced text, text with spaces between words, text with spaces between characters that yielded nonwords, and finally text with spaces between every character. The authors investigated whether the introduction of spaces into unspaced Chinese text facilitates reading and whether the word or, alternatively, the character is a unit of information that is of primary importance in Chinese reading. Global and local measures indicated that sentences with unfamiliar word spaced format were as easy to read as visually familiar unspaced text. Nonword spacing and a space between every character produced longer reading times. In Experiment 2, highlighting was used to create analogous conditions: normal Chinese text, highlighting that marked words, highlighting that yielded nonwords, and highlighting that marked each character. The data from both experiments clearly indicated that words, and not individual characters, are the unit of primary importance in Chinese reading.
Keyword: Article
URL: https://doi.org/10.1037/0096-1523.34.5.1277
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18823210
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2662925
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15
Eye movements and the use of parafoveal word length information in reading
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16
Reading spaced and unspaced Chinese text: evidence from eye movements
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17
Children's and adults' processing of anomaly and implausability during reading: evidence from eye movements
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18
Eye Movements and the Use of Parafoveal Word Length Information in Reading
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19
Children’s and adults’ processing of anomaly and implausibility during reading: Evidence from eye movements
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20
Eye movements when reading disappearing text: the importance of the word to the right of fixation
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