AbstractIn this study, we examined eye movement guidance in Chinese reading. We embedded either a 2-character word or a 4-character word in the same sentence frame, and observed the eye movements of Chinese readers when they read these sentences. We found that when all saccades into the target words were considered that readers eyes tended to land near the beginning of the word. However, we also found that Chinese readers’ eyes landed at the center of words when they made only a single fixation on a word, and that they landed at the beginning of a word when they made more than one fixation on a word. However, simulations that we carried out suggest that these findings cannot be taken to unambiguously argue for word-based saccade targeting i...
In Chinese, as there are no spaces between words to mark word boundaries, readers usually do not tar...
The frequency and contextual predictability of words have a fundamental role in determining where an...
There are currently 2 theoretical accounts of how readers of Chinese select their saccade targets: (...
In this study, we examined eye movement guidance in Chinese reading. We embedded either a 2-characte...
In Chinese reading, there are no spaces to mark the word boundaries, so Chinese readers cannot targe...
The question addressed in the study is concerned with how properties of Chinese characters and words...
The present study examined how insertion of spaces before and after a word affects saccade target se...
The research described in this thesis explores the developmental characteristic of Chinese reading i...
This empirical study examined whether the visual complexities of the first and second characters in ...
This paper analyses some aspects of the eye movement behaviour of readers of Thai and Chinese. The m...
In 2 experiments, we tested the prediction that reading is more efficient when characters belonging ...
This research report try to solve the question of saccade targeting in Chinese reading through three...
Given there are no interword spaces marking word boundaries in Chinese text, it remains unclear how ...
AbstractIn two experiments, we investigated how forward saccades are targeted in Chinese reading. In...
Eye movements are one of the most fundamental behaviors during reading. A growing number of Chinese ...
In Chinese, as there are no spaces between words to mark word boundaries, readers usually do not tar...
The frequency and contextual predictability of words have a fundamental role in determining where an...
There are currently 2 theoretical accounts of how readers of Chinese select their saccade targets: (...
In this study, we examined eye movement guidance in Chinese reading. We embedded either a 2-characte...
In Chinese reading, there are no spaces to mark the word boundaries, so Chinese readers cannot targe...
The question addressed in the study is concerned with how properties of Chinese characters and words...
The present study examined how insertion of spaces before and after a word affects saccade target se...
The research described in this thesis explores the developmental characteristic of Chinese reading i...
This empirical study examined whether the visual complexities of the first and second characters in ...
This paper analyses some aspects of the eye movement behaviour of readers of Thai and Chinese. The m...
In 2 experiments, we tested the prediction that reading is more efficient when characters belonging ...
This research report try to solve the question of saccade targeting in Chinese reading through three...
Given there are no interword spaces marking word boundaries in Chinese text, it remains unclear how ...
AbstractIn two experiments, we investigated how forward saccades are targeted in Chinese reading. In...
Eye movements are one of the most fundamental behaviors during reading. A growing number of Chinese ...
In Chinese, as there are no spaces between words to mark word boundaries, readers usually do not tar...
The frequency and contextual predictability of words have a fundamental role in determining where an...
There are currently 2 theoretical accounts of how readers of Chinese select their saccade targets: (...