JOURNAL ARTICLE

Reading without saccadic eye movements

Gary S. RubinKathleen A. Turano

Year: 1992 Journal:   Vision Research Vol: 32 (5)Pages: 895-902   Publisher: Elsevier BV

Abstract

To assess the limitation on reading speed imposed by saccadic eye movements, we measured reading speed in 13 normally-sighted observers using two modes of text presentations: PAGE text which presents an entire passage conventionally in static, paragraph format, and rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) which presents text sequentially, one word at a time at the same location in the visual field. In Expt 1, subjects read PAGE and RSVP text orally across a wide range of letter sizes (2X to 32X single-letter acuity) and reading speed was computed from the number of correct words read per minute. Reading speeds were consistently faster for RSVP compared to PAGE text at all letter sizes tested. The average speeds for text of an intermediate letter size (8X acuity) were 1171 words/min for RSVP and 303 words/min for PAGE text. In Expt 2 subjects read PAGE and RSVP text silently and a multiple-choice comprehension test was administered after each passage. All subjects continued to read RSVP text faster, and 6 subjects read at the maximum testable rate (1652 words/min) with at least 75% correct on the comprehension tests. Experiment 3 assessed the minimum word exposure time required for decoding text using RSVP to minimize potential delays due to saccadic eye movement control. Successive words were presented for a fixed duration (word duration) with a blank interval (ISI) between words. The minimum word duration required for accurate oral reading averaged 69.4 msec and was not reduced by increasing ISI. We interpret these results as an indication that the programming and execution of saccadic eye movements impose an upper limit on conventional reading speed.

Keywords:
Rapid serial visual presentation Saccadic masking Reading (process) Eye movement Computer science Paragraph Speech recognition Interval (graph theory) Duration (music) Words per minute Word (group theory) Audiology Communication Psychology Artificial intelligence Perception Medicine Neuroscience Mathematics Linguistics Physics

Metrics

215
Cited By
0.85
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
33
Refs
0.72
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

EEG and Brain-Computer Interfaces
Life Sciences →  Neuroscience →  Cognitive Neuroscience
Gaze Tracking and Assistive Technology
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Human-Computer Interaction
Reading and Literacy Development
Social Sciences →  Psychology →  Developmental and Educational Psychology

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