For normally sighted readers, word neighborhood size (i.e., the total number of words that can be formed from a single word by changing only one letter) has a facilitator effect on word recognition. When reading with central field loss (CFL) however, individual letters may not be correctly identified, leading to possible misidentifications and a reverse neighborhood size effect. Here we investigate this inhibitory effect of word neighborhood size on reading performance and whether it is modulated by word predictability and reading proficiency. Nineteen patients with binocular CFL from 32 to 89 years old (mean ± SD = 75 ± 15) read short sentences presented with the self-paced reading paradigm. Accuracy and reading time were measured for each...
AbstractOur goal is to link spatial and temporal properties of letter recognition to reading speed f...
Word length, frequency, and predictability count among the most influential variables during reading...
International audiencePURPOSE. People with central field loss (CFL) lose information in the scotomat...
International audienceBackground: For normally sighted readers, word neighborhood size (i.e., the to...
International audiencePeople with central field loss (CFL) use peripheral vision to identify words. ...
PurposeCrowding, the difficulty in recognizing a letter in close proximity with other letters, has b...
The objective of this work is to introduce text simplification as a potential reading aid to help im...
Previous research on the effect of word length on reading confounded the number of letters (NrL) in ...
International audienceThe objective of this work is to introduce text simplification as a potential ...
SIGNIFICANCE: Scrolling text can be an effective reading aid for those with central vision loss. Our...
International audiencePURPOSE. To describe and quantify a largely unnoticed oculomotor pattern that ...
AbstractWhen the center of a readers, visual field is blocked from view, reading rates decline and e...
Recent research has shown that differences in the effectiveness of spatial frequencies for fast and ...
Orthographic and phonological processing skills have been shown to vary as a function of reader skil...
AbstractPeripheral vision plays an important role in normal reading, but its role becomes larger for...
AbstractOur goal is to link spatial and temporal properties of letter recognition to reading speed f...
Word length, frequency, and predictability count among the most influential variables during reading...
International audiencePURPOSE. People with central field loss (CFL) lose information in the scotomat...
International audienceBackground: For normally sighted readers, word neighborhood size (i.e., the to...
International audiencePeople with central field loss (CFL) use peripheral vision to identify words. ...
PurposeCrowding, the difficulty in recognizing a letter in close proximity with other letters, has b...
The objective of this work is to introduce text simplification as a potential reading aid to help im...
Previous research on the effect of word length on reading confounded the number of letters (NrL) in ...
International audienceThe objective of this work is to introduce text simplification as a potential ...
SIGNIFICANCE: Scrolling text can be an effective reading aid for those with central vision loss. Our...
International audiencePURPOSE. To describe and quantify a largely unnoticed oculomotor pattern that ...
AbstractWhen the center of a readers, visual field is blocked from view, reading rates decline and e...
Recent research has shown that differences in the effectiveness of spatial frequencies for fast and ...
Orthographic and phonological processing skills have been shown to vary as a function of reader skil...
AbstractPeripheral vision plays an important role in normal reading, but its role becomes larger for...
AbstractOur goal is to link spatial and temporal properties of letter recognition to reading speed f...
Word length, frequency, and predictability count among the most influential variables during reading...
International audiencePURPOSE. People with central field loss (CFL) lose information in the scotomat...