The effect of automatic priming of behaviour by linguistic cues is well established. However, as yet these effects have not been directly demonstrated for eye movement responses. We investigated the effect of linguistic cues on eye movements using a modified version of the Stroop task in which a saccade was made to the location of a peripheral colour patch which matched the ‘‘ink” colour of a centrally presented word cue. The words were either colour words (‘‘red”, ‘‘green”, ‘‘blue”, ‘‘yellow”) or location words (‘‘up”,‘‘down”, ‘‘left”, ‘‘right”). As in the original version of the Stroop task the identity of the word could be either congruent or incongruent with the response location. The results showed that oculomotor programming was infl...
grantor: University of TorontoThe relationship between visual attention and saccades was ...
Where readers move their eyes, while proceeding forward along lines of text, has long been assumed t...
Implicit up/down words, such as bird and foot, systematically influence performance on visual tasks ...
AbstractThe effect of automatic priming of behaviour by linguistic cues is well established. However...
AbstractIn two experiments, the source of competition in the saccadic Stroop effect was investigated...
In two experiments, the source of competition in the saccadic Stroop effect was investigated. Colore...
<div><p>Traditionally, language processing has been attributed to a separate system in the brain, wh...
Traditionally, language processing has been attributed to a separate system in the brain, which supp...
Item does not contain fulltextInvestigators have found no agreement on the functional locus of Stroo...
International audience550 In the Stroop task (Stroop, 1935), participants are instructed to name the...
As the effects of saccade induced cognition enhancement (SICE) have been found in studies investigat...
Recent eye-tracking research has revealed that spoken language can guide eye gaze very rapidly (and ...
The research reported in this thesis attempted to establish the underlying representational substrat...
International audienceWhere readers move their eyes, while proceeding forward along lines of text, h...
Word frequency and orthographic familiarity were independently manipulated as readers' eye movements...
grantor: University of TorontoThe relationship between visual attention and saccades was ...
Where readers move their eyes, while proceeding forward along lines of text, has long been assumed t...
Implicit up/down words, such as bird and foot, systematically influence performance on visual tasks ...
AbstractThe effect of automatic priming of behaviour by linguistic cues is well established. However...
AbstractIn two experiments, the source of competition in the saccadic Stroop effect was investigated...
In two experiments, the source of competition in the saccadic Stroop effect was investigated. Colore...
<div><p>Traditionally, language processing has been attributed to a separate system in the brain, wh...
Traditionally, language processing has been attributed to a separate system in the brain, which supp...
Item does not contain fulltextInvestigators have found no agreement on the functional locus of Stroo...
International audience550 In the Stroop task (Stroop, 1935), participants are instructed to name the...
As the effects of saccade induced cognition enhancement (SICE) have been found in studies investigat...
Recent eye-tracking research has revealed that spoken language can guide eye gaze very rapidly (and ...
The research reported in this thesis attempted to establish the underlying representational substrat...
International audienceWhere readers move their eyes, while proceeding forward along lines of text, h...
Word frequency and orthographic familiarity were independently manipulated as readers' eye movements...
grantor: University of TorontoThe relationship between visual attention and saccades was ...
Where readers move their eyes, while proceeding forward along lines of text, has long been assumed t...
Implicit up/down words, such as bird and foot, systematically influence performance on visual tasks ...