Eye Movements in Reading: Perceptual and Language ProcessesKeith Rayner Eye Movements in Reading: Perceptual and Language Processes focuses on eye movement and cognitive processes as a way to study the reading process. This book also discusses the different aspects of reading. Organized into seven parts encompassing 26 chapters, this book begins with a discussion on the perceptual and psychophysical factors essential to eye movement during reading. This book then explains how some psychophysical factors, such as type size and masking, affect the reading performance. Other chapters consider the role of transient and sustained cells, as well as their possible effect ... |
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Page 216
... lexical processes , on the one hand , and a theory of referential semantics , textual organi- zation and the use of world knowledge , on the other , the two theories will meet . The alternative is to assume that there is a crucial stage ...
... lexical processes , on the one hand , and a theory of referential semantics , textual organi- zation and the use of world knowledge , on the other , the two theories will meet . The alternative is to assume that there is a crucial stage ...
Page 218
... lexical entries ; the purpose of the discussion is to determine whether fully exploiting this information in any way mitigates the need to construct a full structural representation of a sentence . We will assume that a lexical entry ...
... lexical entries ; the purpose of the discussion is to determine whether fully exploiting this information in any way mitigates the need to construct a full structural representation of a sentence . We will assume that a lexical entry ...
Page 233
... lexical preferences and pragmatic considerations on the ultimately preferred analysis of sentences . Ford , Bresnan , & Kaplan ( 1981 ) argue that the momentarily preferred lexical form of a verb is responsible for determining the ...
... lexical preferences and pragmatic considerations on the ultimately preferred analysis of sentences . Ford , Bresnan , & Kaplan ( 1981 ) argue that the momentarily preferred lexical form of a verb is responsible for determining the ...
Contents
Saccades and Extraretinal Signals | 11 |
3 | 32 |
The Temporal Characteristics | 41 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
50 msec ambiguous analysis average Bertera Bouma Breitmeyer buffer Carpenter characteristics characters Cognitive Psychology comprehension conceptual constraints context control of eye current fixation disambiguating dyslexia dyslexics effects encoding Erlbaum experiment Experimental Psychology eye fixations eye movement record fixated word fixation duration fixations in reading foveal frequency function function words gaze duration Hillsdale hypothesis identified influence initial integration interaction interpretation Journal of Experimental Kolers language processing latency letterlike symbols letters lexical linguistic masking McConkie memory microsaccades movements in reading msec normal O'Regan occur oculomotor onset Perception & Psychophysics perceptual span peripheral phrase Pollatsek position predictability presented prior pronoun psycholinguistic Rayner readers region regressions retinal right of fixation saccade length semantic sentence sequential Shebilske spatial stimulus structure subjects suggests superior colliculus syntactic task theory tion variables Verbal Behavior visible visible language Vision Research visual angle visual information visual perception word length Zola