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Effects of Spatial Frequencies on Word Identification by Fast and Slow Readers: Evidence from Eye Movements.

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posted on 2016-11-11, 15:55 authored by T. R. Jordan, Jasmine Dixon, Victoria A. McGowan, Stoyan Kurtev, Kevin B. Paterson
Recent research has shown that differences in the effectiveness of spatial frequencies for fast and slow skilled adult readers may be an important component of differences in reading ability in the skilled adult reading population (Jordan et al., 2016a). But the precise nature of this influence on lexical processing during reading remains to be fully determined. Accordingly, to gain more insight into the use of spatial frequencies by skilled adult readers with fast and slow reading abilities, the present study looked at effects of spatial frequencies on the processing of specific target words in sentences. These target words were of either high or low lexical frequency and each sentence was displayed as normal or filtered to contain only very low, low, medium, high, or very high spatial frequencies. Eye movement behavior for target words was closest to normal for each reading ability when text was shown in medium or higher spatial frequency displays, although reading occurred for all spatial frequencies. Moreover, typical word frequency effects (the processing advantage for words with higher lexical frequencies) were observed for each reading ability across a broad range of spatial frequencies, indicating that many different spatial frequencies provide access to lexical representations during textual reading for both fast and slow skilled adult readers. Crucially, however, target word fixations were fewer and shorter for fast readers than for slow readers for all display types, and this advantage for fast readers appeared to be similar for normal, medium, high, and very high spatial frequencies but larger for low and very low spatial frequencies. Therefore, although fast and slow skilled adult readers can both use a broad range of spatial frequencies when reading, fast readers make more effective use of these spatial frequencies, and especially those that are lower, when processing the identities of words.

Funding

The research was funded by a research awarded to TJ and KP by the Ulverscroft Foundation, an Experimental Psychology Society Undergraduate Research Bursary awarded to JD, and an ESRC Future Research Leaders Postdoctoral Fellowship to VM.

History

Citation

Frontiers in Psychology, 2016, 7:1433.

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/MBSP Non-Medical Departments/Neuroscience, Psychology and Behaviour

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Frontiers in Psychology

Publisher

Frontiers Media

eissn

1664-1078

Acceptance date

2016-09-07

Copyright date

2016

Available date

2016-11-11

Publisher version

http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01433/full

Language

en

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