A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Perspective effects in repeated reading: An eye movement study




AuthorsKaakinen JK, Hyona J

PublisherPSYCHONOMIC SOC INC

Publication year2007

JournalMemory and Cognition

Journal name in sourceMEMORY & COGNITION

Journal acronymMEM COGNITION

Volume35

Issue6

First page 1323

Last page1336

Number of pages14

ISSN0090-502X

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.3758/BF03193604


Abstract
The present study examined the influence of perspective instructions on online processing of expository text during repeated reading. Sixty-two participants read either a high or a low prior knowledge (HPK vs. LPK) text twice from a given perspective while their eye movements were recorded. They switched perspective before a third reading. Reading perspective affected the first-pass reading and also increased sentence wrap-up processing time in the perspective-relevant sentences. Prior knowledge facilitated the recognition of the (ir)relevance of text information and resulted in relatively earlier perspective effects in the HPK versus LPK text. Repeated reading facilitated processing, as indicated by all eye movement measures. After the perspective switch, a repetition benefit was observed for the previously relevant text information, whereas a repetition cost was found for the previously irrelevant text information. These results indicate that reading perspective and prior knowledge have a significant influence on how readers allocate visual attention during reading.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 21:46