posted on 2020-04-30, 12:04authored byJuan Su, Guoen Yin, Xuejun Bai, Guoli Yan, Stoyan Kurtev, Kayleigh L Warrington, Victoria A McGowan, Simon P Liversedge, Kevin B Paterson
Readers can acquire useful information from only a narrow region of text around each fixation (the perceptual span), which extends asymmetrically in the direction of reading. Studies with bilingual readers have additionally shown that this asymmetry reverses with changes in horizontal reading direction. However, little is known about the perceptual span's flexibility following orthogonal (vertical vs. horizontal) changes in reading direction, because of the scarcity of vertical writing systems and because changes in reading direction often are confounded with text orientation. Accordingly, we assessed effects in a language (Mongolian) that avoids this confound, in which text is conventionally read vertically but can also be read horizontally. Sentences were presented normally or in a gaze-contingent paradigm in which a restricted region of text was displayed normally around each fixation and other text was degraded. The perceptual span effects on reading rates were similar in both reading directions. These findings therefore provide a unique (nonconfounded) demonstration of perceptual span flexibility.
Funding
The research was supported by a grant from the Inner Mongolia Department of Education (NJSY16138) to J.S., a scholarship from the Chinese Scholarship Council (201708120083) to J.S. to make a research visit to the University of Leicester, a scholarship from the British Council/Newton Fund to K.L.W. to make a research visit to Tianjin Normal University, a “Future Research Leaders” postdoctoral fellowship from the Economic and Social Research Council (Grant ES/L010836/1) to V.A.M., and a 1000 Talents Visiting Professorship from Tianjin Normal University to K.B.P.
History
Citation
Attention, Perception, and Psychophysics, 2020
Author affiliation
Department of Neuroscience, Psychology and Behaviour