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Tracking the Mind During Reading: The Influence of Past, Present, and Future Words on Fixation Durations

Journal of Experimental Psychology, 135(1): 12--35, 2005.
Authors: Reinhold Kliegl and Antje Nuthmann and Ralf Engbert
Tags: attention eyetracking parallel psychology reading
Abstract: Reading requires the orchestration of visual, attentional, language-related, and oculomotor processing constraints. This study replicates previous effects of frequency, predictability, and length of fixated words on fixation durations in natural reading and demonstrates new effects of these variables related to previous and next words. Results are based on fixation durations recorded from 222 persons, each reading 144 sentences. Such evidence for distributed processing of words across fixation durations challenges psycholinguistic immediacy-of-processing and eye-mind assumptions. Most of the time the mind processes several words in parallel at different perceptual and cognitive levels. Eye movements can help to unravel these processes.
| BibTeX  
@article{KlieglEtAl2005,
title = {Tracking the Mind During Reading: The Influence of Past, Present, and Future Words on Fixation Durations},
author = {Reinhold Kliegl and Antje Nuthmann and Ralf Engbert},
journal = {Journal of Experimental Psychology},
number = {1},
pages = {12--35},
volume = {135},
year = {2005},
abstract = {Reading requires the orchestration of visual, attentional, language-related, and oculomotor processing constraints. This study replicates previous effects of frequency, predictability, and length of fixated words on fixation durations in natural reading and demonstrates new effects of these variables related to previous and next words. Results are based on fixation durations recorded from 222 persons, each reading 144 sentences. Such evidence for distributed processing of words across fixation durations challenges psycholinguistic immediacy-of-processing and eye-mind assumptions. Most of the time the mind processes several words in parallel at different perceptual and cognitive levels. Eye movements can help to unravel these processes. },
keywords = {attention eyetracking parallel psychology reading }
}