This thesis reports seven experiments which investigate what determines where the eyes move during reading. Specifically, the experiments examine what kinds of linguistic information can influence where words are first fixated and refixated. Experiment 1 showed that fixations landed nearer to the beginning of words in which the initial letter sequence was misspelled, compared to when the words were spelled correctly. Experiments 2 and 3 showed that the effects of misspellings on saccade programming can not be explained by lexical non-foveal preprocessing, and therefore the results of Experiment 1 must be due to preprocessing of the orthographic familiarity of word initial letter sequences. These results were confirmed in Experiment 4, which...
This experiment employed the boundary paradigm during sentence reading to explore the nature of earl...
AbstractWe examined the initial landing position of the eyes in target words that were either predic...
AbstractPrevious research has found that words are identified most quickly when the eyes are near th...
AbstractTwo experiments show that eye fixations land nearer to the beginning of misspelled than corr...
An important issue in the understanding of eye movements in reading is what kind of non-foveal infor...
Two experiments show that eye fixations land nearer to the beginning of misspelled than correctly sp...
An important issue in the understanding of eye movements in reading is what kind of nonfoveal inform...
An important issue in the understanding of eye movements in reading is what kind of nonfoveal inform...
Two eye tracking experiments show that, for near launch sites, the eyes land nearer to the beginning...
Contrasting predictions of serial and parallel views on the processing of foveal and parafoveal info...
Word frequency and orthographic familiarity were independently manipulated as readers' eye movements...
Two eye tracking experiments show that, for near launch sites, the eyes land nearer to the beginning...
Two eye tracking experiments show that, for near launch sites, the eyes land nearer to the beginning...
Reilly and O’Regan (1998, Vision Research, 38, 303–317) used computer simulations to evaluate how we...
AbstractTwo experiments that examined the characteristics of information extracted from a parafoveal...
This experiment employed the boundary paradigm during sentence reading to explore the nature of earl...
AbstractWe examined the initial landing position of the eyes in target words that were either predic...
AbstractPrevious research has found that words are identified most quickly when the eyes are near th...
AbstractTwo experiments show that eye fixations land nearer to the beginning of misspelled than corr...
An important issue in the understanding of eye movements in reading is what kind of non-foveal infor...
Two experiments show that eye fixations land nearer to the beginning of misspelled than correctly sp...
An important issue in the understanding of eye movements in reading is what kind of nonfoveal inform...
An important issue in the understanding of eye movements in reading is what kind of nonfoveal inform...
Two eye tracking experiments show that, for near launch sites, the eyes land nearer to the beginning...
Contrasting predictions of serial and parallel views on the processing of foveal and parafoveal info...
Word frequency and orthographic familiarity were independently manipulated as readers' eye movements...
Two eye tracking experiments show that, for near launch sites, the eyes land nearer to the beginning...
Two eye tracking experiments show that, for near launch sites, the eyes land nearer to the beginning...
Reilly and O’Regan (1998, Vision Research, 38, 303–317) used computer simulations to evaluate how we...
AbstractTwo experiments that examined the characteristics of information extracted from a parafoveal...
This experiment employed the boundary paradigm during sentence reading to explore the nature of earl...
AbstractWe examined the initial landing position of the eyes in target words that were either predic...
AbstractPrevious research has found that words are identified most quickly when the eyes are near th...