JOURNAL ARTICLE

Semantic preview benefit in eye movements during reading: A parafoveal fast-priming study.

Sven HohensteinJochen LaubrockReinhold Kliegl

Year: 2010 Journal:   Journal of Experimental Psychology Learning Memory and Cognition Vol: 36 (5)Pages: 1150-1170   Publisher: American Psychological Association

Abstract

Eye movements in reading are sensitive to foveal and parafoveal word features. Whereas the influence of orthographic or phonological parafoveal information on gaze control is undisputed, there has been no reliable evidence for early parafoveal extraction of semantic information in alphabetic script. Using a novel combination of the gaze-contingent fast-priming and boundary paradigms, we demonstrate semantic preview benefit when a semantically related parafoveal word was available during the initial 125 ms of a fixation on the pretarget word (Experiments 1 and 2). When the target location was made more salient, significant parafoveal semantic priming occurred only at 80 ms (Experiment 3). Finally, with short primes only (20, 40, 60 ms), effects were not significant but were numerically in the expected direction for 40 and 60 ms (Experiment 4). In all experiments, fixation durations on the target word increased with prime durations under all conditions. The evidence for extraction of semantic information from the parafoveal word favors an explanation in terms of parallel word processing in reading.

Keywords:
Foveal Eye movement Fixation (population genetics) Psychology Gaze Priming (agriculture) Cognitive psychology Semantics (computer science) Semantic memory Eye tracking Computer science Cognition Artificial intelligence Retinal Neuroscience Population

Metrics

145
Cited By
8.19
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
99
Refs
0.98
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Reading and Literacy Development
Social Sciences →  Psychology →  Developmental and Educational Psychology
Gaze Tracking and Assistive Technology
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Human-Computer Interaction
Visual perception and processing mechanisms
Life Sciences →  Neuroscience →  Cognitive Neuroscience

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