According to an influential account of aging effects on reading, older adults (65+ years) employ a more “risky” reading strategy compared to young adults (18-30 years), in which they attempt to compensate for slower processing by using lexical and contextual knowledge to guess upcoming (i.e., parafoveal) words more often. Consequently, while older adults may read more slowly, they might also skip words more often (by moving their gaze past words without fixating them), especially when these are of higher lexical frequency or more predictable from context. However, this characterization of aging effects on reading has been challenged recently following several failures to replicate key aspects of the risky reading hypothesis, as well as evid...
This thesis reports three eye-tracking experiments which examine whether young (aged 18 – 30 years) ...
This thesis reports three eye-tracking experiments which examine whether young (aged 18 – 30 years) ...
Research using alphabetic languages shows that, compared to young adults, older adults employ a risk...
According to an influential account of aging effects on reading, older adults (65+ years) employ a m...
The ability to read well is essential for individuals to function effectively in modern societies. H...
Older adults are thought to compensate for slower lexical processing by making greater use of contex...
Older adults are thought to compensate for slower lexical processing by making greater use of contex...
Older adults are thought to compensate for slower lexical processing by making greater use of contex...
An influential account of normative aging effects on reading holds that older adults make greater us...
Research using alphabetic languages shows that, compared to young adults, older adults employ a risk...
Age-related reading difficulty is well established for alphabetic languages. Compared to young adult...
Age-related reading difficulty is well established for alphabetic languages. Compared to young adult...
Eye-movement studies have demonstrated that, relative to college-aged readers, older readers of alph...
Eye-movement studies have demonstrated that, relative to college-aged readers, older readers of alph...
This project aimed to understand the cognitive processes underlying adult age differences in reading...
This thesis reports three eye-tracking experiments which examine whether young (aged 18 – 30 years) ...
This thesis reports three eye-tracking experiments which examine whether young (aged 18 – 30 years) ...
Research using alphabetic languages shows that, compared to young adults, older adults employ a risk...
According to an influential account of aging effects on reading, older adults (65+ years) employ a m...
The ability to read well is essential for individuals to function effectively in modern societies. H...
Older adults are thought to compensate for slower lexical processing by making greater use of contex...
Older adults are thought to compensate for slower lexical processing by making greater use of contex...
Older adults are thought to compensate for slower lexical processing by making greater use of contex...
An influential account of normative aging effects on reading holds that older adults make greater us...
Research using alphabetic languages shows that, compared to young adults, older adults employ a risk...
Age-related reading difficulty is well established for alphabetic languages. Compared to young adult...
Age-related reading difficulty is well established for alphabetic languages. Compared to young adult...
Eye-movement studies have demonstrated that, relative to college-aged readers, older readers of alph...
Eye-movement studies have demonstrated that, relative to college-aged readers, older readers of alph...
This project aimed to understand the cognitive processes underlying adult age differences in reading...
This thesis reports three eye-tracking experiments which examine whether young (aged 18 – 30 years) ...
This thesis reports three eye-tracking experiments which examine whether young (aged 18 – 30 years) ...
Research using alphabetic languages shows that, compared to young adults, older adults employ a risk...