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Cross-linguistic comparison in reading sentences...
Journal article

Cross-linguistic comparison in reading sentences of uniform length: Visual–perceptual demands override readers’ experience

Abstract

Accurate saccadic targeting is critical for efficient reading and is driven by the sensory input under the eye-gaze. Yet whether a reader's experience with the distributional properties of their written language also influences saccadic targeting is an open debate. This study of Russian sentence reading follows Cutter et al.'s (2017) study in English and presents readers with sentences consisting of words of the same length. We hypothesised that if the readers' experience matters as per discrete control account, Russian readers would produce longer saccades and farther landing positions than the ones produced by English readers. On the contrary, if the saccadic targeting is primarily driven by the immediate perceptual demands that override readers' experience as per the dynamic adjustment account, the saccades of Russian and English readers would be of the same length, resulting in similar landing positions. The results in both Cutter et al. and the present study provided evidence for the latter account: Russian readers showed rapid and accurate adjustment of saccade lengths and landing positions to the highly constrained input. Crucially, the saccade lengths and landing positions did not differ between English and Russian readers even in the cross-linguistically length-matched stimuli.

Authors

Parshina O; Zdorova N; Kuperman V

Journal

Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, Vol. 77, No. 8, pp. 1694–1702

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Publication Date

August 1, 2024

DOI

10.1177/17470218231206719

ISSN

1747-0218

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