A spatial cuing task was used to identify two types of readers, those with a relatively fast and those with a relatively slow buildup of inhibition of return (IOR). Backward-directed eye movements (regressions) during sentence reading were then examined as a function of the two IOR types. The results revealed that readers with fast IOR executed larger regressions than readers with slow IOR, as they directed the eyes away from the most recently attended area of text. Forward-directed eye movements (saccades), by contrast, were not a function of IOR type. Ease of sentence comprehension influenced the size of regressions, but this effect was also independent of IOR type. Multiple mechanisms of spatial attention, including IOR, bias eye movemen...
Unimpaired readers process words incredibly fast and hence it was assumed that top-down processing, ...
AbstractEye movements during the reading of multi-line pages of texts were analyzed to determine the...
ABSTRACT—Previous research has shown a left-to-right bias in the inhibition-of-return effect. This b...
AbstractWe examined the characteristics of readers’ eye movements as they read sentences or short pa...
To examine the nature of forward saccadic eye movements in reading, eye movement records were collec...
Models of eye-movement control during reading focus on reading single lines of text. However, with m...
282 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1992.Studies of eye movements duri...
AbstractPrevious research has found that words are identified most quickly when the eyes are near th...
In the current study we investigated the effect of removing word length variability within sentences...
This study used a classic exogenous cueing task in which an abrupt onset cue indicated the target lo...
In this article, we discuss the use of eye movement data to assess moment-to-moment comprehension pr...
Text contains a range of different spatial frequencies but the effectiveness of spatial frequencies ...
In an eye-tracking experiment we examined the risky reading hypothesis, in which long saccades and m...
Return-sweeps are an essential eye-movement that takes the readers’ eyes from the end of one line of...
International audienceThe present study re-investigated the effect of character size on eye behaviou...
Unimpaired readers process words incredibly fast and hence it was assumed that top-down processing, ...
AbstractEye movements during the reading of multi-line pages of texts were analyzed to determine the...
ABSTRACT—Previous research has shown a left-to-right bias in the inhibition-of-return effect. This b...
AbstractWe examined the characteristics of readers’ eye movements as they read sentences or short pa...
To examine the nature of forward saccadic eye movements in reading, eye movement records were collec...
Models of eye-movement control during reading focus on reading single lines of text. However, with m...
282 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1992.Studies of eye movements duri...
AbstractPrevious research has found that words are identified most quickly when the eyes are near th...
In the current study we investigated the effect of removing word length variability within sentences...
This study used a classic exogenous cueing task in which an abrupt onset cue indicated the target lo...
In this article, we discuss the use of eye movement data to assess moment-to-moment comprehension pr...
Text contains a range of different spatial frequencies but the effectiveness of spatial frequencies ...
In an eye-tracking experiment we examined the risky reading hypothesis, in which long saccades and m...
Return-sweeps are an essential eye-movement that takes the readers’ eyes from the end of one line of...
International audienceThe present study re-investigated the effect of character size on eye behaviou...
Unimpaired readers process words incredibly fast and hence it was assumed that top-down processing, ...
AbstractEye movements during the reading of multi-line pages of texts were analyzed to determine the...
ABSTRACT—Previous research has shown a left-to-right bias in the inhibition-of-return effect. This b...