© 2017 The Author(s). Words are recognized most efficiently by young adults when fixated at an optimal viewing position (OVP), which for English is between a word\u27s beginning and middle letters. How this OVP effect changes with age is unknown but may differ for older adults due to visual declines in later life. Accordingly, a lexical decision experiment was conducted in which short (5-letter) and long (9-letter) words were fixated at various letter positions. The older adults produced slower responses. But, crucially, effects of fixation location for each word-length did not differ substantially across age groups, indicating that OVP effects are preserved in older age
Objectives: Sensitivity to spatial frequencies changes with age and this may have profound effects o...
This thesis reports three eye-tracking experiments which examine whether young (aged 18 – 30 years) ...
Normal aging has been shown to impact cognitive processes, including those necessary for lexical acc...
© 2017 The Author(s). Words are recognized most efficiently by young adults when fixated at an optim...
Words are recognized most efficiently by young adults when fixated at an optimal viewing position ...
Substantial evidence indicates that where readers fixate within a word affects the efficiency with w...
The present study investigated age differences in attentional allocation in a word localization and ...
Twenty-four undergraduates and 24 retired faculty participated in an experiment involving semantic p...
The ability to read well is essential for individuals to function effectively in modern societies. H...
This thesis reports seven experiments which examine whether young and older adult readers differ in ...
It is well-established that young adults encode letter position flexibly during natural reading. How...
Background: The visual span (i.e., an estimate of the number of letters that can be recognized relia...
During the fourth age, a marked physiological deterioration and critical points of dysfunction are o...
In an eye movement experiment, we assessed the performance of young (18-30 years) and older (65 + ye...
Background: The visual span (i.e., an estimate of the number of letters that can be recognized reli...
Objectives: Sensitivity to spatial frequencies changes with age and this may have profound effects o...
This thesis reports three eye-tracking experiments which examine whether young (aged 18 – 30 years) ...
Normal aging has been shown to impact cognitive processes, including those necessary for lexical acc...
© 2017 The Author(s). Words are recognized most efficiently by young adults when fixated at an optim...
Words are recognized most efficiently by young adults when fixated at an optimal viewing position ...
Substantial evidence indicates that where readers fixate within a word affects the efficiency with w...
The present study investigated age differences in attentional allocation in a word localization and ...
Twenty-four undergraduates and 24 retired faculty participated in an experiment involving semantic p...
The ability to read well is essential for individuals to function effectively in modern societies. H...
This thesis reports seven experiments which examine whether young and older adult readers differ in ...
It is well-established that young adults encode letter position flexibly during natural reading. How...
Background: The visual span (i.e., an estimate of the number of letters that can be recognized relia...
During the fourth age, a marked physiological deterioration and critical points of dysfunction are o...
In an eye movement experiment, we assessed the performance of young (18-30 years) and older (65 + ye...
Background: The visual span (i.e., an estimate of the number of letters that can be recognized reli...
Objectives: Sensitivity to spatial frequencies changes with age and this may have profound effects o...
This thesis reports three eye-tracking experiments which examine whether young (aged 18 – 30 years) ...
Normal aging has been shown to impact cognitive processes, including those necessary for lexical acc...