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1.
Q J Exp Psychol (Hove) ; 65(7): 1397-413, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22540847

ABSTRACT

Two experiments examined how interruptions impact reading and how interruption lags and the reader's spatial memory affect the recovery from such interruptions. Participants read paragraphs of text and were interrupted unpredictably by a spoken news story while their eye movements were monitored. Time made available for consolidation prior to responding to the interruption did not aid reading resumption. However, providing readers with a visual cue that indicated the interruption location did aid task resumption substantially in Experiment 2. Taken together, the findings show that the recovery from interruptions during reading draws on spatial memory resources and can be aided by processes that support spatial memory. Practical implications are discussed.


Subject(s)
Attention , Eye Movements/physiology , Memory/physiology , Reading , Space Perception/physiology , Acoustic Stimulation , Adolescent , Adult , Analysis of Variance , Cues , Female , Fixation, Ocular , Humans , Male , Neuropsychological Tests , Time Factors , Young Adult
2.
Int J Psychol ; 45(1): 40-7, 2010 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22043847

ABSTRACT

A previous study by Pollatsek et al. ( 1993 ) claims that the perceptual span in reading is restricted to the fixated line, i.e. readers typically focus their visual attention on the line of text being read. The present study investigated whether readers make use of content structure signals (paragraph indentations and topic headings) present several lines away from the currently fixated line. We reasoned that as these signals are low-resolution visual objects (as opposed to letter and word identity), readers may attend to them even if they are located some distance away from the fixated line. Participants read a hierarchically organized multi-topic expository text containing structure signals in either a normal condition or a window condition, where the text disappeared above and below a vertical 3° gaze-contingent region. After reading, participants were asked to produce a written recall of the text. The results showed that the overall reading rate was not affected by the window. Nevertheless, the headings were reread more in the normal condition than in the window one. In addition, more topics were recalled in the normal than in the window condition. We interpret the results as indicating that the readers visually attend to useful text layout features while considering bigger units than single text lines. The perception of topic headings located away from the fixated line may favour long-range regressions towards them, which in turn may favour text comprehension. This claim is consistent with previous studies that showed that look-back fixations to headings are performed with an integrative intent.


Subject(s)
Attention , Fixation, Ocular , Mental Recall , Orientation , Pattern Recognition, Visual , Reading , Adolescent , Adult , Comprehension , Female , Humans , Male , Saccades , Writing , Young Adult
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