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The role of perceptual and word identification spans in reading efficiency: Evidence from hearing and deaf readers. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Theories suggest that eye movement decisions while reading are influenced by both visual and linguistic factors.
  • In experiments that masked spaces and letters, it was found that both hearing and deaf readers have similar perceptual and word identification spans but differ in reading efficiency.
  • Deaf readers showed a better reading rate, especially when engaging with leftward text, indicating they might rely more on leftward visual information despite similarities in eye movement spans.

Article Abstract

Theories of reading posit that decisions about "where" and "when" to move the eyes are driven by visual and linguistic factors, extracted from the perceptual span and word identification span, respectively. We tested this hypothesized dissociation by masking, outside of a visible window, either the spaces between the words (to assess the perceptual span, Experiment 1) or the letters within the words (to assess the word identification span, Experiment 2). We also investigated whether deaf readers' previously reported larger reading span was specifically linked to one of these spans. We analyzed reading rate to test overall reading efficiency, as well as average saccade length to test "where" decisions and average fixation duration to test "when" decisions. Both hearing and deaf readers' perceptual spans extended between 10 and 14 characters, and their word identification spans extended to eight characters to the right of fixation. Despite similar sized rightward spans, deaf readers read more efficiently overall and showed a larger increase in reading rate when leftward text was available, suggesting they attend more to leftward information. Neither rightward span was specifically related to where or when decisions for either group. Our results challenge the assumed dissociation between type of reading span and type of saccade decision and indicate that reading efficiency requires access to both perceptual and linguistic information in the parafovea. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/xge0001633DOI Listing

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