Oculomotor and linguistic processing effects in reading dynamic horizontally scrolling text

Hannah Harvey, Hayward Godwin, Gemma Fitzsimmons, Simon P. Liversedge, Robin Walker

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Abstract

Two experiments are reported investigating oculomotor behavior and linguistic processing when reading dynamic horizontally scrolling text (compared to reading normal static text). Three factors known to modulate processing time in normal reading were investigated: Word length and word frequency were examined in Experiment 1, and target word predictability in Experiment 2. An analysis of global oculomotor behavior across the 2 experiments showed that participants made fewer and longer fixations when reading scrolling text, with shorter progressive and regressive saccades between these fixations. Comparisons of the linguistic manipulations showed evidence of a dissociation between word-level and sentence-level processing. Word-level processing (Experiment 1) was preserved for the dynamic scrolling text condition with no difference in length and frequency effects between scrolling and static text formats. However, sentence-level integration (Experiment 2) was reduced for scrolling compared to static text in that we obtained no early facilitation effect for predictable words under scrolling text conditions.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)518-536
Number of pages19
JournalJournal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance
Volume43
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Mar 2017

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