How listening to music affects reading: Evidence from eye tracking.

J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn

Combined Program in Education and Psychology.

Published: November 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined how music influences eye movements and reading comprehension among college students.
  • Results indicated that while music did not overall hinder word recognition, it led to increased rereading and less predictable gaze patterns for rare words.
  • Changing songs further disrupted reading, especially affecting the processing of low-frequency words, highlighting the nuanced impact of auditory distractions on comprehension.

Article Abstract

The current research looked at how listening to music affects eye movements when college students read natural passages for comprehension. Two studies found that effects of music depend on both frequency of the word and dynamics of the music. Study 1 showed that lexical and linguistic features of the text remained highly robust predictors of looking times, even in the music condition. However, under music exposure, (a) readers produced more rereading, and (b) gaze duration on words with very low frequency were less predicted by word length, suggesting disrupted sublexical processing. Study 2 showed that these effects were exacerbated for a short period as soon as a new song came into play. Our results suggested that word recognition generally stayed on track despite music exposure and that extensive rereading can, to some extent, compensate for disruption. However, an irrelevant auditory signal may impair sublexical processing of low-frequency words during first-pass reading, especially when the auditory signal changes dramatically. These eye movement patterns are different from those observed in some other scenarios in which reading comprehension is impaired, including mindless reading. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2018 APA, all rights reserved).

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/xlm0000544DOI Listing

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