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Effects of Word Predictability and Preview Lexicality on Eye Movements During Reading: A Comparison Between Young and Older Adults

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Abstract
Previous eye-tracking research has characterized older adults' reading patterns as "risky," arguing that compared to young adults, older adults skip more words, have longer saccades, and are more likely to regress to previous portions of the text. In the present eye-tracking study, we reexamined the claim that older adults adopt a risky reading strategy, utilizing the boundary paradigm to manipulate parafoveal preview and contextual predictability of a target word. Results showed that older adults had longer fixation durations compared to young adults; however, there were no age differences in skipping rates, saccade length, or proportion of regressions. In addition, readers showed higher skipping rates of the target word if the preview string was a word than if it was a nonword, regardless of age. Finally, the effect of predictability in reading times on the target word was larger for older adults than for young adults. These results suggest that older adults' reading strategies are not as risky as was previously claimed. Instead, we propose that older adults can effectively combine top-down information from the sentence context with bottom-up information from the parafovea to optimize their reading strategies.
Author(s)
Choi, WonilLowder, Matthew W.Ferreira, FernandaSwaab, Tamara Y.Henderson, John M.
Issued Date
2017-05
Type
Article
DOI
10.1037/pag0000160
URI
https://scholar.gist.ac.kr/handle/local/13768
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Citation
Psychology and Aging, v.32, no.3, pp.232 - 242
ISSN
0882-7974
Appears in Collections:
School of Humanities and Social Sciences > 1. Journal Articles
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