Word-initial letters influence fixation durations during fluent reading
- Christopher J. Hand,
- Patrick J. O'Donnell,
- Sara C. Sereno
- ,
- University of Glasgow
Open access
Abstract
The present study examined how word-initial letters influence lexical access during reading. Eye movements were monitored as participants read sentences containing target words. Three factors were independently manipulated. First, target words had either high or low constraining word-initial letter sequences (e.g., dwarf or clown, respectively). Second, tar-gets were either high or low in frequency of occurrence (e.g., train or stain, respectively). Third, targets were embedded in either biasing or neutral contexts (i.e., targets were high or low in their predictability).This 2 (constraint) × 2 (frequency) × 2 (context) design allowed us to examine the conditions under which a word's initial letter sequence could facilitate pro-cessing. Analyses of fixation duration data revealed significant main effects of constraint, frequency, and context. Moreover, in measures taken to reflect "early" lexical processing (i.e., first and single fixation duration), there was a significant interaction between con-straint and context. The overall pattern of findings suggests lexical access is facilitated by highly constraining word-initial letters. Results are discussed in comparison to recent studies of lexical features involved in word recognition during reading.
Publication Information
Output type
Original language
EnglishArticle number
Article 85Journal (Volume, Issue Number)
Frontiers in Psychology (Volume 3, Issue APR)Publication milestones
- Published - 2012
Publication status
External Publication IDs
- Scopus: 84867132033
