An interaction of word frequency and word regularity has typically been observed in naming and lexical decision experiments in which, in addition to an overall effect of word frequency, responses to low-frequency exception words are slower than those to low-frequency regular words, while no such difference occurs with high-frequency words. The only eye movement study to examine this effect in reading (Inhoff & Topolski, 1994) reported only transient effects of regularity. In the present experiment, we examined the frequency x regularity interaction using different stimuli than those of Inhoff and Topolski and also varied the parafoveal preview of the target word prior to fixation. When the preview was valid, the frequency x regularity i...
A word's frequency of occurrence and its predictability from a prior context are key factors determi...
A corpus of eye movement data derived from 10 English and 10 French participants, each reading about...
AbstractTwo experiments show that eye fixations land nearer to the beginning of misspelled than corr...
An interaction of word frequency and word regularity has typically been observed in naming and lexic...
The effect of word frequency on eye movement behaviour during reading has been reported in many expe...
The average duration of eye fixations in reading places constraints on the time for lexical processi...
Contextual constraint is a key factor affecting a word’s fixation duration and its likelihood of bei...
The authors examined word skipping in reading in 2 experiments. In Experiment 1, skipping rates were...
In an eye tracking experiment during reading, we examined the Repetition Effect whereby words that a...
Word frequency and orthographic familiarity were independently manipulated as readers' eye movements...
Subjects read sentences containing target words that were homophones (words with a single pronunciat...
Experiments in this dissertation investigate the role of cognition in eye-movement behavior during s...
AbstractA corpus of eye movement data derived from 10 English and 10 French participants, each readi...
Contrasting predictions of the dual-route and parallel distributed processing models of word recogni...
A word\u27s frequency of occurrence and its predictability from a prior context are key factors dete...
A word's frequency of occurrence and its predictability from a prior context are key factors determi...
A corpus of eye movement data derived from 10 English and 10 French participants, each reading about...
AbstractTwo experiments show that eye fixations land nearer to the beginning of misspelled than corr...
An interaction of word frequency and word regularity has typically been observed in naming and lexic...
The effect of word frequency on eye movement behaviour during reading has been reported in many expe...
The average duration of eye fixations in reading places constraints on the time for lexical processi...
Contextual constraint is a key factor affecting a word’s fixation duration and its likelihood of bei...
The authors examined word skipping in reading in 2 experiments. In Experiment 1, skipping rates were...
In an eye tracking experiment during reading, we examined the Repetition Effect whereby words that a...
Word frequency and orthographic familiarity were independently manipulated as readers' eye movements...
Subjects read sentences containing target words that were homophones (words with a single pronunciat...
Experiments in this dissertation investigate the role of cognition in eye-movement behavior during s...
AbstractA corpus of eye movement data derived from 10 English and 10 French participants, each readi...
Contrasting predictions of the dual-route and parallel distributed processing models of word recogni...
A word\u27s frequency of occurrence and its predictability from a prior context are key factors dete...
A word's frequency of occurrence and its predictability from a prior context are key factors determi...
A corpus of eye movement data derived from 10 English and 10 French participants, each reading about...
AbstractTwo experiments show that eye fixations land nearer to the beginning of misspelled than corr...