AbstractThe integration of visual, lexical, and oculomotor information is a critical part of reading. Mr. Chips is an ideal-observer model that combines these sources of information optimally to read simple texts in the minimum number of saccades. This model provides a computational framework for interpreting human reading saccades in both normal and low vision. The purpose of this paper is to report performance of the model for conditions emulating reading with normal vision––a visual span of nine characters, multiplicative saccade noise with a standard deviation of 30%, and texts based on three full-length children's books. Comparison of fixation locations by humans and Mr. Chips revealed: (1) that both exhibit very similar word-skipping ...
Reading relies critically on processing text in foveal vision during brief fixational pauses, and hi...
SummarySaccadic eye movements and fixations are the behavioral means by which we visually sample tex...
In this article, we discuss the use of eye movement data to assess moment-to-moment comprehension pr...
AbstractIn research on eye-movement control during reading, the importance of cognitive processes re...
The goal of the present research was to determine the role of rudimentary visuo-motor pathways, from...
Decades of reading research have led to sophisticated accounts of single-word recognition and, in pa...
Reilly and O’Regan (1998, Vision Research, 38, 303–317) used computer simulations to evaluate how we...
Eye movement control in reading is one of the best and most naturalistic examples of the adaptive de...
AbstractPrevious research has found that words are identified most quickly when the eyes are near th...
International audienceThe present study re-investigated the effect of character size on eye behaviou...
Reading, an essential skill for successful function in today?s society, is a complex psychological p...
International audienceDuring reading, saccadic eye movements are generated to shift words into the c...
Reading, an essential skill for successful function in today’s society, is a complex psychological p...
This paper presents results from the first rational model of eye movement control in reading to make...
Contemporary models of eye movement control in reading assume a discrete target word selection proce...
Reading relies critically on processing text in foveal vision during brief fixational pauses, and hi...
SummarySaccadic eye movements and fixations are the behavioral means by which we visually sample tex...
In this article, we discuss the use of eye movement data to assess moment-to-moment comprehension pr...
AbstractIn research on eye-movement control during reading, the importance of cognitive processes re...
The goal of the present research was to determine the role of rudimentary visuo-motor pathways, from...
Decades of reading research have led to sophisticated accounts of single-word recognition and, in pa...
Reilly and O’Regan (1998, Vision Research, 38, 303–317) used computer simulations to evaluate how we...
Eye movement control in reading is one of the best and most naturalistic examples of the adaptive de...
AbstractPrevious research has found that words are identified most quickly when the eyes are near th...
International audienceThe present study re-investigated the effect of character size on eye behaviou...
Reading, an essential skill for successful function in today?s society, is a complex psychological p...
International audienceDuring reading, saccadic eye movements are generated to shift words into the c...
Reading, an essential skill for successful function in today’s society, is a complex psychological p...
This paper presents results from the first rational model of eye movement control in reading to make...
Contemporary models of eye movement control in reading assume a discrete target word selection proce...
Reading relies critically on processing text in foveal vision during brief fixational pauses, and hi...
SummarySaccadic eye movements and fixations are the behavioral means by which we visually sample tex...
In this article, we discuss the use of eye movement data to assess moment-to-moment comprehension pr...