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Eye movements in reading and information processing: Keith Rayner's 40 year legacy
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42 |
An inhibitory influence of transposed letter neighbors on eye movements during reading
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43 |
The use of probabilistic lexicality cues for word segmentation in Chinese reading
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44 |
Effects of word frequency and visual complexity on eye movements of young and older Chinese readers
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45 |
Processing of Arabic Diacritical Marks: : Phonological-Syntactic Disambiguation of Homographic Verbs and Visual Crowding Effects
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Processing of Arabic diacritical marks: phonological-syntactic disambiguation of homographic verbs and visual crowding effects
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50 |
Positional character frequency and word spacing facilitate the acquisition of novel words during Chinese children's reading
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51 |
Lexical processing in children and adults during word copying
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52 |
RadicalLocator: a software tool for identifying radicals in Chinese characters
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53 |
Vergence responses to vertical binocular disparity during lexical identification
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54 |
Working memory, reading ability and the effects of distance and typicality on anaphor resolution in children
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56 |
Reading transposed text: effects of transposed letter distance and consonant-vowel status on eye movements
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Abstract:
Two experiments were conducted to investigate the flexibility of letter-position encoding in word identification during reading. In both experiments, two tasks were used. First, participants? eye movements were measured as they read sentences containing transposed letter (TL) strings. Second, participants were presented with the TL strings in isolation and were asked to discriminate them from nonwords. In Experiment 1, we manipulated the distance between transposed letters (ligament vs. liagment vs. limagent vs. lieamgnt). Reading/response times increased with the distance between TLs. In Experiment 2, we manipulated whether the TLs were consonants, vowels, or one of each (ssytem vs. faeture vs. fromat). Reading/response times showed that CV transpositions were the most disruptive. In both experiments, response accuracy was particularly poor for words presented in isolation when there was an intervening letter between TLs. These data show that processing across multiple fixations, and the presence of a meaningful sentence context, are important for flexible letter position encoding in lexical identification.
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Keyword:
C800 - Psychology
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URL: http://clok.uclan.ac.uk/22370/ https://doi.org/10.3758/s13414-014-0707-2
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58 |
Children?s and adults? on-line processing of syntactically ambiguous sentences during reading
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59 |
Parafoveal processing across different lexical constituents in Chinese reading
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60 |
Using E-Z Reader to examine the concurrent development of eye-movement control and reading skill
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