Effects of Vowel Length on Gaze Durations in Silent and Oral Reading

Vowel length is known to affect reaction times in single word reading. Eye movement studies involving silent sentence reading showed that phonological information of a word can be acquired even before it is fixated. However, it remained an open question whether vowel length directly influences oculo...

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Main Author: Lynn Huestegge
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Bern Open Publishing 2010-12-01
Series:Journal of Eye Movement Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://bop.unibe.ch/JEMR/article/view/2310
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spelling doaj-48410ecf92ac423c90bf0a645f630eeb2021-05-28T13:34:37ZengBern Open PublishingJournal of Eye Movement Research1995-86922010-12-013510.16910/jemr.3.5.5Effects of Vowel Length on Gaze Durations in Silent and Oral ReadingLynn Huestegge0RWTH Aachen UniversityVowel length is known to affect reaction times in single word reading. Eye movement studies involving silent sentence reading showed that phonological information of a word can be acquired even before it is fixated. However, it remained an open question whether vowel length directly influences oculomotor control in sentence reading. In the present eye tracking study, subjects read sentences that included target words of varying vowel length and frequency. In Experiment 1, subjects read silently for comprehension, whereas Experiment 2 involved oral reading. Experiments 3 and 4 additionally included an articulatory suppression task and a foot tapping task. Results indicated that in conditions that did not require additional articulation (Experiments 1 and 4) gaze durations were increased for words with long vowels compared to words with short vowels. Conditions that required simultaneous articulation (Experiments 2 and 3) did not yield a vowel length effect. The results point to an influence of phonetic properties on oculomotor control during silent reading around the time of the completion of lexical access.https://bop.unibe.ch/JEMR/article/view/2310vowel lengthreadingeye movementsdual taskarticulatory suppressionsilent reading
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lynn Huestegge
spellingShingle Lynn Huestegge
Effects of Vowel Length on Gaze Durations in Silent and Oral Reading
Journal of Eye Movement Research
vowel length
reading
eye movements
dual task
articulatory suppression
silent reading
author_facet Lynn Huestegge
author_sort Lynn Huestegge
title Effects of Vowel Length on Gaze Durations in Silent and Oral Reading
title_short Effects of Vowel Length on Gaze Durations in Silent and Oral Reading
title_full Effects of Vowel Length on Gaze Durations in Silent and Oral Reading
title_fullStr Effects of Vowel Length on Gaze Durations in Silent and Oral Reading
title_full_unstemmed Effects of Vowel Length on Gaze Durations in Silent and Oral Reading
title_sort effects of vowel length on gaze durations in silent and oral reading
publisher Bern Open Publishing
series Journal of Eye Movement Research
issn 1995-8692
publishDate 2010-12-01
description Vowel length is known to affect reaction times in single word reading. Eye movement studies involving silent sentence reading showed that phonological information of a word can be acquired even before it is fixated. However, it remained an open question whether vowel length directly influences oculomotor control in sentence reading. In the present eye tracking study, subjects read sentences that included target words of varying vowel length and frequency. In Experiment 1, subjects read silently for comprehension, whereas Experiment 2 involved oral reading. Experiments 3 and 4 additionally included an articulatory suppression task and a foot tapping task. Results indicated that in conditions that did not require additional articulation (Experiments 1 and 4) gaze durations were increased for words with long vowels compared to words with short vowels. Conditions that required simultaneous articulation (Experiments 2 and 3) did not yield a vowel length effect. The results point to an influence of phonetic properties on oculomotor control during silent reading around the time of the completion of lexical access.
topic vowel length
reading
eye movements
dual task
articulatory suppression
silent reading
url https://bop.unibe.ch/JEMR/article/view/2310
work_keys_str_mv AT lynnhuestegge effectsofvowellengthongazedurationsinsilentandoralreading
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