Currently there are several computational models of eye movement control that provide a good account of oculomotor behavior during reading of English and other alphabetic languages. I will provide an overview of two dominant models: E-Z Reader and SWIFT, as well as a recently proposed model: OB1-Reader. I will evaluate a critical issue of controversy among models, namely, whether words are lexically processed serially or in parallel. I will then consider reading in Chinese, a character-based, unspaced language with ambiguous word boundaries. Finally, I will evaluate the concepts of serialism and parallelism of process central to these models, and how these models might function in relation to lexical processing that is operationalized over ...
Although the development of the field of reading has been impressive, there are a number of issues t...
AbstractA corpus of eye movement data derived from 10 English and 10 French participants, each readi...
Eye movement control in reading is one of the best and most naturalistic examples of the adaptive de...
Currently there are several computational models of eye movement control that provide a good account...
In this editorial for the Special Issue on Serial and Parallel Processing in Reading we explore the ...
International audienceReading research has long endorsed the view that words are processed strictly ...
Since it has become increasingly difficult to tease apart the predictions of serial and parallel mod...
As the number of computational models of eye-movement control in reading increases, so too will the...
AbstractThis paper presents an experiment investigating attention allocation in four tasks requiring...
The coordination of word-recognition and oculomotor processes during reading was evaluated in two ey...
AbstractIn this article, we revisit the mindless reading paradigm from the perspective of computatio...
Kliegl, Nuthmann, and Engbert (2006) reported an impressive set of data analyses dealing with the in...
Decades of reading research have led to sophisticated accounts of single-word recognition and, in pa...
Mathematical models have become an important tool for understanding the control of eye movements dur...
Reilly and O’Regan (1998, Vision Research, 38, 303–317) used computer simulations to evaluate how we...
Although the development of the field of reading has been impressive, there are a number of issues t...
AbstractA corpus of eye movement data derived from 10 English and 10 French participants, each readi...
Eye movement control in reading is one of the best and most naturalistic examples of the adaptive de...
Currently there are several computational models of eye movement control that provide a good account...
In this editorial for the Special Issue on Serial and Parallel Processing in Reading we explore the ...
International audienceReading research has long endorsed the view that words are processed strictly ...
Since it has become increasingly difficult to tease apart the predictions of serial and parallel mod...
As the number of computational models of eye-movement control in reading increases, so too will the...
AbstractThis paper presents an experiment investigating attention allocation in four tasks requiring...
The coordination of word-recognition and oculomotor processes during reading was evaluated in two ey...
AbstractIn this article, we revisit the mindless reading paradigm from the perspective of computatio...
Kliegl, Nuthmann, and Engbert (2006) reported an impressive set of data analyses dealing with the in...
Decades of reading research have led to sophisticated accounts of single-word recognition and, in pa...
Mathematical models have become an important tool for understanding the control of eye movements dur...
Reilly and O’Regan (1998, Vision Research, 38, 303–317) used computer simulations to evaluate how we...
Although the development of the field of reading has been impressive, there are a number of issues t...
AbstractA corpus of eye movement data derived from 10 English and 10 French participants, each readi...
Eye movement control in reading is one of the best and most naturalistic examples of the adaptive de...