Word length is one of the main determinants of eye movements during reading and has been shown to influence slow readers more strongly than typical readers. The influence of word length on reading in individuals with different reading skill levels has been shown in separate eye-tracking and electroencephalography studies. However, the influence of reading difficulty on cortical correlates of word length effect during natural reading is unknown. To investigate how reading skill is related to brain activity during natural reading, we performed an exploratory analysis on our data set from a previous study, where slow reading (N = 27) and typically reading (N = 65) 12-to-13.5-year-old children read sentences while co-registered ET-EEG was recorded. We extracted fixation-related potentials (FRPs) from the sentences using the linear deconvolution approach. We examined standard eye-movement variables and deconvoluted FRP estimates: intercept of the response, categorical effect of first fixation versus additional fixation and continuous effect of word length. We replicated the pattern of stronger word length effect in eye movements for slow readers. We found a difference between typical readers and slow readers in the FRP intercept, which contains activity that is common to all fixations, within a fixation time-window of 50-300 ms. For both groups, the word length effect was present in brain activity during additional fixations; however, this effect was not different between groups. This suggests that stronger word length effect in the eye movements of slow readers might be mainly due re-fixations, which are more probable due to the lower efficiency of visual processing.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.visres.2019.07.008DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

word length
32
slow readers
16
reading skill
12
brain activity
12
natural reading
12
eye movements
12
reading
10
influence reading
8
word
8
length
8

Similar Publications

A Cultural Evolutionary Model for the Law of Abbreviation.

Top Cogn Sci

December 2024

Institut Jean Nicod, Département d'études cognitives, ENS, EHESS, CNRS, PSL University.

Efficiency principles are increasingly called upon to study features of human language and communication. Zipf's law of abbreviation is widely seen as a classic instance of a linguistic pattern brought about by language users' search for efficient communication. The "law"-a recurrent correlation between the frequency of words and their brevity-is a near-universal principle of communication, having been found in all of the hundreds of human languages where it has been tested, and a few nonhuman communication systems as well.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Selective attention to the emotional quality (valence) of words enhances the early ability to differentiate emotions associated with relevant words while diminishing responses to irrelevant ones.
  • The study involved 58 participants who responded quickly to words of a certain emotional quality, revealing that short, high-frequency, and low-arousal words were more effectively processed in terms of emotional discrimination.
  • Results indicate that both emotional quality and arousal levels interact during initial processing, supporting the idea that these factors influence how we perceive and react to emotional words at a subconscious level.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Both the quantity and quality of the maternal language input are important for early language development. However, depression and anxiety can negatively impact mothers' engagement with their infants and their infants' expressive language abilities. Australian mother-infant dyads ( = 30) participated in a longitudinal study examining the effect of maternal language input when infants were 24 and 30 months and maternal depression and anxiety symptoms on vocabulary size.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: Accurate assessment of pain severity is important for caring for patients with sickle cell disease (SCD). The Brief Pain Inventory was developed to address limitations of previous pain-rating metrics and is available in a short form (BPI-SF). However, the BPI-SF is a self-report scale dependent on patient comprehension and interpretation of items.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: To promote sustained contributions by physicians to online health care communities, these platforms have introduced a content payment model that offers economic incentives for physicians' online knowledge activities. However, the impact of these paid features on unpaid knowledge activities remains unexplored.

Objective: This study investigated how the introduction of economic incentives in online medical communities affects physicians' unpaid knowledge activities in the community.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!