International audienceThe present study re-investigated the effect of character size on eye behaviour during reading, in order to test McConkie, Kerr, Reddix, and Zola's (1988) Saccadic Range Error (SRE) hypothesis. This assumes that saccades are biased to move the eyes a constant, optimal distance in the task (i.e., range error), while aiming at the centre of peripherally selected target words. Results showed in contradiction with this hypothesis, (1) that the linear relationship between the eye launch site and the mean landing sites in words is not invariant to character size, and (2) that the optimal launch-site distance to the centre of words varies depending on the spatial extent of the words, and differs from the mean length of saccad...
Reilly and O’Regan (1998, Vision Research, 38, 303–317) used computer simulations to evaluate how we...
Sixty-six college students read two chapters from a contemporary novel while their eye movements wer...
Contemporary models of eye movement control in reading assume a discrete target word selection proce...
International audienceThe present study re-investigated the effect of character size on eye behaviou...
International audienceDuring reading, saccadic eye movements are generated to shift words into the c...
In the current study we investigated the effect of removing word length variability within sentences...
In the current study we investigated whether readers adjust their preferred saccade length (PSL) dur...
Previous research on the effect of word length on reading confounded the number of letters (NrL) in ...
AbstractPrevious research has found that words are identified most quickly when the eyes are near th...
International audienceWhere readers move their eyes, while proceeding forward along lines of text, h...
International audienceMost studies today agree about the link between visual-attention and oculomoto...
McConkie, Kerr, Reddix, & Zola [(1988). Vision Research, 28, 1107–1118] demonstrated that the distri...
AbstractMcConkie, Kerr, Reddix, & Zola [(1988). Vision Research, 28, 1107–1118] demonstrated that th...
International audienceThe present study investigated the impact of inter-character spacing on saccad...
AbstractThe launch-site effect, a systematic variation of within-word landing position as a function...
Reilly and O’Regan (1998, Vision Research, 38, 303–317) used computer simulations to evaluate how we...
Sixty-six college students read two chapters from a contemporary novel while their eye movements wer...
Contemporary models of eye movement control in reading assume a discrete target word selection proce...
International audienceThe present study re-investigated the effect of character size on eye behaviou...
International audienceDuring reading, saccadic eye movements are generated to shift words into the c...
In the current study we investigated the effect of removing word length variability within sentences...
In the current study we investigated whether readers adjust their preferred saccade length (PSL) dur...
Previous research on the effect of word length on reading confounded the number of letters (NrL) in ...
AbstractPrevious research has found that words are identified most quickly when the eyes are near th...
International audienceWhere readers move their eyes, while proceeding forward along lines of text, h...
International audienceMost studies today agree about the link between visual-attention and oculomoto...
McConkie, Kerr, Reddix, & Zola [(1988). Vision Research, 28, 1107–1118] demonstrated that the distri...
AbstractMcConkie, Kerr, Reddix, & Zola [(1988). Vision Research, 28, 1107–1118] demonstrated that th...
International audienceThe present study investigated the impact of inter-character spacing on saccad...
AbstractThe launch-site effect, a systematic variation of within-word landing position as a function...
Reilly and O’Regan (1998, Vision Research, 38, 303–317) used computer simulations to evaluate how we...
Sixty-six college students read two chapters from a contemporary novel while their eye movements wer...
Contemporary models of eye movement control in reading assume a discrete target word selection proce...