Eye movements in reading: Some theoretical context

The study of eye movements has proven to be one of the most successful approaches in research on reading. In this overview, it is argued that a major reason for this success is that eye movement measurement is not just a methodology—the control of eye movements is actually part and parcel of the dynamics of information processing within the task of reading itself. Some major developments over the last decade are discussed with a focus on the issue of spatially distributed word processing and its relation to the development of reading models. The survey ends with a description of two newly emerging trends in the field: the study of continuous reading in non-Roman writing systems and the broadening of the scope of research to encompass individual differences and developmental issues.

[1]  Alexander Pollatsek,et al.  Encoding multiple words simultaneously in reading is implausible , 2009, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[2]  K. Rayner Eye Movements and Visual Cognition , 1992 .

[3]  J. Findlay,et al.  Active Vision: The Psychology of Looking and Seeing , 2003 .

[4]  Suiping Wang,et al.  Do Chinese readers obtain preview benefit from word n + 2? Evidence from eye movements. , 2009, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[5]  Ralph Radach,et al.  Eye movements and parafoveal processing during reading in Korean , 2012 .

[6]  A Treisman,et al.  Feature binding, attention and object perception. , 1998, Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences.

[7]  K. Rayner,et al.  Eye movements and word skipping during reading: effects of word length and predictability. , 2011, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[8]  Thomas W. Hogaboam,et al.  18 – Reading Patterns in Eye Movement Data , 1983 .

[9]  Heiner Deubel,et al.  The mind's eye : cognitive and applied aspects of eye movement research , 2003 .

[10]  Ralf Engbert,et al.  On the launch-site effect for skipped words during reading , 2010, Vision Research.

[11]  Ralf Engbert,et al.  A dynamical model of saccade generation in reading based on spatially distributed lexical processing , 2002, Vision Research.

[12]  Lynn Huestegge,et al.  How children read for comprehension: Eye movements in developing readers , 2009 .

[13]  Alan Kennedy,et al.  Chapter 10 – The Reader's Spatial Code , 2003 .

[14]  K. Rayner,et al.  Eye movements and information processing during reading , 2004 .

[15]  Keith Rayner,et al.  Eye movements and phonological parafoveal preview: effects of reading skill. , 2005, Canadian journal of experimental psychology = Revue canadienne de psychologie experimentale.

[16]  Alexander Pollatsek,et al.  Unspaced text interferes with both word identification and eye movement control , 1998, Vision Research.

[17]  Ronan G. Reilly,et al.  Models of oculomotor control in reading , 2007 .

[18]  Jie-Li Tsai,et al.  Usage of statistical cues for word boundary in reading Chinese sentences , 2012 .

[19]  Suiping Wang,et al.  Is preview benefit from word n + 2 a common effect in reading Chinese? Evidence from eye movements , 2012, Reading and writing.

[20]  Ralf Engbert,et al.  Tracking the mind during reading: the influence of past, present, and future words on fixation durations. , 2006, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[21]  Jukka Hyönä,et al.  Development of the letter identity span in reading: evidence from the eye movement moving window paradigm. , 2009, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[22]  M. Posner,et al.  Establishing a time‐line of word recognition: evidence from eye movements and event‐related potentials , 1998, Neuroreport.

[23]  James S. Adelman,et al.  Letters in Words Are Read Simultaneously, Not in Left-to-Right Sequence , 2010, Psychological science.

[24]  Jukka Hyönä,et al.  The role of interword spacing in reading Japanese: An eye movement study , 2007, Vision Research.

[25]  Albrecht W. Inhoff,et al.  Advancing the methodological middle ground , 2003 .

[26]  G. McConkie,et al.  The span of the effective stimulus during a fixation in reading , 1975 .

[27]  D. Balota,et al.  Inferences about eye movement control from the perceptual span in reading , 1986, Perception & psychophysics.

[28]  Xingshan Li,et al.  Eye movement guidance in Chinese reading: Is there a preferred viewing location? , 2011, Vision Research.

[29]  Jian Wang,et al.  Reading Chinese Script : A Cognitive Analysis , 1999 .

[30]  Michael C. Mozer,et al.  Perception of multiple objects - a connectionist approach , 1991, Neural network modeling and connectionism.

[31]  R. Radach,et al.  Chapter 7 – Relations Between Spatial and Temporal Aspects of Eye Movement Control , 2000 .

[32]  Reinhold Kliegl,et al.  Semantic preview benefit in eye movements during reading: A parafoveal fast-priming study. , 2010, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[33]  F. Vitu,et al.  Eye movements in reading isolated words: evidence for strong biases towards the center of the screen , 2004, Vision Research.

[34]  G. d'Ydewalle,et al.  The in ̄uence of semantic context on initial eye landing sites in words , 2000 .

[35]  Ralph Radach,et al.  Phonological representation of words in working memory during sentence reading , 2004, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[36]  Ralf Engbert,et al.  An iterative algorithm for the estimation of the distribution of mislocated fixations during reading. , 2007 .

[37]  G. M. Reicher Perceptual recognition as a function of meaninfulness of stimulus material. , 1969, Journal of experimental psychology.

[38]  Alexander Pollatsek,et al.  Early morphological effects in reading: Evidence from parafoveal preview benefit in Hebrew , 2003, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[39]  Reinhold Kliegl,et al.  SWIFT: a dynamical model of saccade generation during reading. , 2005, Psychological review.

[40]  G. Underwood Eye guidance in reading and scene perception , 1998 .

[41]  Simon P. Liversedge,et al.  Eye movement behaviour during reading of Japanese sentences: Effects of word length and visual complexity , 2012 .

[42]  G. McConkie,et al.  What guides a reader's eye movements? , 1976, Vision Research.

[43]  R. Radach,et al.  Early parafoveal processing in reading Chinese sentences. , 2009, Acta psychologica.

[44]  Keith Rayner,et al.  Letter-by-Letter Acquired Dyslexia Is Due to the Serial Encoding of Letters , 2005, Psychological science.

[45]  R. Kliegl,et al.  Adult age differences in the perceptual span during reading. , 2011, Psychology and aging.

[46]  R. E. Morrison,et al.  Manipulation of stimulus onset delay in reading: evidence for parallel programming of saccades. , 1984, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[47]  Susan Kemper,et al.  Learning to ignore distracters. , 2012, Psychology and aging.

[48]  R H S Carpenter,et al.  An anatomically constrained, stochastic model of eye movement control in reading. , 2005, Psychological review.

[49]  Erik D. Reichle,et al.  The E-Z Reader model of eye-movement control in reading: Comparisons to other models , 2003, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[50]  K. Rayner The 35th Sir Frederick Bartlett Lecture: Eye movements and attention in reading, scene perception, and visual search , 2009, Quarterly journal of experimental psychology.

[51]  Keith Rayner,et al.  Do readers obtain preview benefit from word N + 2? A test of serial attention shift versus distributed lexical processing models of eye movement control in reading. , 2007, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[52]  A Treisman,et al.  Feature analysis in early vision: evidence from search asymmetries. , 1988, Psychological review.

[53]  Alexander Pollatsek,et al.  Morphological parsing and the use of segmentation cues in reading Finnish compounds , 2004 .

[54]  K. Rayner Eye movements and visual cognition : scene perception and reading , 1992 .

[55]  George W. McConkie,et al.  Saccade generation during reading: Are words necessary? , 2004 .

[56]  K. Stanovich Understanding the Styles of Science in the Study of Reading , 2003 .

[57]  P. W. Kerr,et al.  Eye movement control during reading: I. The location of initial eye fixations on words , 1987, Vision Research.

[58]  C. Lappe Eye movements: A window on mind and brain , 2008 .

[59]  Keith Rayner,et al.  Skilled Deaf Readers Have an Enhanced Perceptual Span in Reading , 2012, Psychological science.

[60]  Erik D. Reichle,et al.  Toward a model of eye movement control in reading. , 1998, Psychological review.

[61]  A. Kennedy,et al.  Reprint of “Non-canonical reading: Reply to Rayner, Pollatsek, Liversedge and Reichle” [Vision Research 49/14 (2008) 1916–1918] , 2009, Vision Research.

[62]  A. Jacobs,et al.  Optimal viewing position effect in word recognition: A challenge to current theory. , 1992 .

[63]  Jukka Hyönä,et al.  Do irregular letter combinations attract readers' attention? Evidence from fixation locations in words. , 1995 .

[64]  Ralph Radach,et al.  Eye Movements in Reading , 1999 .

[65]  A. Kennedy,et al.  Parafoveal-on-foveal effects in normal reading , 2005, Vision Research.

[66]  Reinhold Kliegl,et al.  Eye movements and brain electric potentials during reading , 2012, Psychological research.

[67]  A. Treisman Features and Objects: The Fourteenth Bartlett Memorial Lecture , 1988, The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology. A, Human experimental psychology.

[68]  Keith Rayner,et al.  Parafoveal processing of word n + 2 during reading: do the preceding words matter? , 2011, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[69]  W. Huber,et al.  Recovery in a letter-by-letter reader: more efficiency at the expense of normal reading strategy , 2013, Neurocase.

[70]  Françoise Vitu,et al.  About the global effect and the critical role of retinal eccentricity: Implications for eye movements in reading , 2008 .

[71]  Albrecht W. Inhoff,et al.  Orthographic regularity gradually modulates saccade amplitudes in reading , 2004 .

[72]  James L. McClelland,et al.  A distributed, developmental model of word recognition and naming. , 1989, Psychological review.

[73]  Yi Xu,et al.  Psycholinguistic Implications for Linguistic Relativity: A Case Study of Chinese , 1992 .

[74]  Barbara J. Juhasz,et al.  The effect of word predictability on the eye movements of Chinese readers , 2005, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[75]  Erik D. Reichle,et al.  The effect of word frequency, word predictability, and font difficulty on the eye movements of young and older readers. , 2006, Psychology and aging.

[76]  A. Kennedy,et al.  Non-canonical reading: Reply to Rayner, Pollatsek, Liversedge and Reichle (2008) , 2009, Vision Research.

[77]  Kyle R. Cave,et al.  On the segmentation of Chinese words during reading , 2009, Cognitive Psychology.

[78]  Xuejun Bai,et al.  The effect of word and character frequency on the eye movements of Chinese readers. , 2006, British journal of psychology.

[79]  M. Coltheart,et al.  The quarterly journal of experimental psychology , 1985 .

[80]  K. Rayner,et al.  Preview benefit during eye fixations in reading for older and younger readers. , 2010, Psychology and aging.

[81]  Johanna K. Kaakinen,et al.  Task effects on eye movements during reading. , 2010, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[82]  Wayne S. Murray Commentary on Section 4 – Sentence Processing: Issues and Measures , 2000 .

[83]  George W. McConkie,et al.  About Regressive Saccades in Reading and Their Relation to Word Identification , 1998 .

[84]  Ronan G. Reilly,et al.  Some empirical tests of an interactive activation model of eye movement control in reading , 2006, Cognitive Systems Research.

[85]  Vera Kempe,et al.  An individual analysis of initial fixation positions in reading. , 1993 .

[86]  Ralf Engbert,et al.  Self-Consistent Estimation of Mislocated Fixations during Reading , 2008, PloS one.

[87]  Alexander Pollatsek,et al.  Mislocated fixations can account for parafoveal-on-foveal effects in eye movements during reading , 2008, Quarterly journal of experimental psychology.

[88]  Denis Drieghe,et al.  Parafoveal-on-foveal effects on eye movements during reading , 2011 .

[89]  Ralph Radach,et al.  Time course of linguistic information extraction from consecutive words during eye fixations in reading. , 2005, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[90]  Ralph Radach,et al.  Contextual constraint and N + 2 preview effects in reading , 2013, Quarterly journal of experimental psychology.

[91]  James L. McClelland,et al.  An interactive activation model of context effects in letter perception: I. An account of basic findings. , 1981 .

[92]  Alan Kennedy,et al.  The Spatial Coding Hypothesis , 1992 .

[93]  K. Rayner,et al.  Using stroke removal to investigate Chinese character identification during reading: evidence from eye movements , 2011, Reading and Writing.

[94]  M D Reddix,et al.  Eye movement control during reading: II. Frequency of refixating a word , 1989, Perception & psychophysics.

[95]  Erik D. Reichle,et al.  Tests of the E-Z Reader model: Exploring the interface between cognition and eye-movement control , 2006, Cognitive Psychology.

[96]  Naoyuki Osaka,et al.  Eye movement control in reading unspaced text: the case of the Japanese script , 2001, Vision Research.

[97]  M Coltheart,et al.  DRC: a dual route cascaded model of visual word recognition and reading aloud. , 2001, Psychological review.

[98]  Reinhold Kliegl,et al.  Parafoveal processing in reading: Manipulating n+1 and n+2 previews simultaneously , 2008, Visual cognition.

[99]  M. Tinker,et al.  Recent studies of eye movements in reading. , 1958, Psychological bulletin.

[100]  Keith Rayner,et al.  Top-down and bottom-up effects in pure alexia: Evidence from eye movements , 2007, Neuropsychologia.

[101]  Hazel I. Blythe,et al.  Children’s eye movements during reading , 2011 .

[102]  F. Vitu,et al.  The influence of parafoveal preprocessing and linguistic context on the optimal landing position effect , 1991, Perception & psychophysics.

[103]  A. Noë,et al.  Acting out our sensory experience , 2001 .

[104]  R. Walker,et al.  A model of saccade generation based on parallel processing and competitive inhibition , 1999, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[105]  Keith Rayner,et al.  Parafoveal processing in reading , 2011, Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics.

[106]  K. Rayner,et al.  Making and correcting errors during sentence comprehension: Eye movements in the analysis of structurally ambiguous sentences , 1982, Cognitive Psychology.

[107]  K. Nakayama,et al.  Sustained and transient components of focal visual attention , 1989, Vision Research.

[108]  K. Rayner The perceptual span and peripheral cues in reading , 1975, Cognitive Psychology.

[109]  HighWire Press Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London , 1781, The London Medical Journal.

[110]  R. Reilly,et al.  The role of global top-down factors in local eye-movement control in reading , 2008, Psychological research.

[111]  Guy Thomas Buswell,et al.  An experimental study of the eye-voice span in reading , 2008 .

[112]  S. Liversedge,et al.  Oxford handbook of eye movements , 2011 .

[113]  F. Vitu Visual extraction processes and regressive saccades in reading , 2005 .

[114]  Ming Yan,et al.  Preview fixation duration modulates identical and semantic preview benefit in Chinese reading , 2012 .

[115]  George W. McConkie,et al.  Reading Chinese: Some basic eye-movement characteristics. , 1999 .

[116]  Simon P Liversedge,et al.  Linguistic and nonlinguistic influences on the eyes' landing positions during reading , 2006, Quarterly journal of experimental psychology.

[117]  R. Reilly,et al.  The dynamics of reading in non-Roman writing systems: a Reading and Writing Special Issue , 2012 .

[118]  Alan Kennedy,et al.  The Influence of Parafoveal Words on Foveal Inspection Time: Evidence for a Processing Trade-Off , 1998 .

[119]  M. Mozer,et al.  On the Interaction of Selective Attention and Lexical Knowledge: A Connectionist Account of Neglect Dyslexia , 1990, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[120]  Ulrich W. Weger,et al.  Sources of information for the programming of short- and long-range regressions during reading. , 2005 .

[121]  Keith Rayner,et al.  On the Processing of Meaning from Parafoveal Vision During Eye Fixations in Reading , 2003 .

[122]  John Heil,et al.  Perception and cognition , 1983 .

[123]  Barbara J. Juhasz,et al.  Distinct Subsystems for the Parafoveal Processing of Spatial and Linguistic Information during Eye Fixations in Reading , 2003, The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology. A, Human experimental psychology.

[124]  Jie-Li Tsai,et al.  Where Do Chinese Readers Send Their Eyes , 2003 .

[125]  A. Noë,et al.  A sensorimotor account of vision and visual consciousness. , 2001, The Behavioral and brain sciences.

[126]  Siliang Tang,et al.  EyeMap: a software system for visualizing and analyzing eye movement data in reading , 2011, Behavior Research Methods.

[127]  Erik D. Reichle,et al.  Direct lexical control of eye movements in reading: Evidence from a survival analysis of fixation durations , 2012, Cognitive Psychology.

[128]  George W. McConkie,et al.  How Cognition Affects Eye Movements During Reading , 2003 .

[129]  Suiping Wang,et al.  Semantic and plausibility effects on preview benefit during eye fixations in Chinese reading , 2012, Reading and writing.

[130]  Albrecht W. Inhoff,et al.  Complex compounds in German: Interword spaces facilitate segmentation but hinder assignment of meaning , 2000 .

[131]  M. H. Fischer,et al.  Readers’ responses to sub-genre and rhyme scheme in poetry , 2006 .

[132]  A. Meyers Reading , 1999, Language Teaching.

[133]  S. Liversedge,et al.  Eye movements during Chinese reading , 2013 .

[134]  K. Rayner,et al.  Eye movements and the perceptual span in older and younger readers. , 2009, Psychology and aging.

[135]  Heather Winskel,et al.  Eye movements when reading spaced and unspaced Thai and English : a comparison of Thai–English bilinguals and English monolinguals , 2009 .

[136]  G. Legge,et al.  Mr. Chips: An ideal-observer model of reading , 1997 .

[137]  K Rayner,et al.  Eye movements and the perceptual span in beginning and skilled readers. , 1986, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[138]  G. Underwood Cognitive processes in eye guidance , 2005 .

[139]  V. Kuperman,et al.  Effects of individual differences in verbal skills on eye-movement patterns during sentence reading. , 2011, Journal of memory and language.

[140]  K. Rayner,et al.  Comparing naming, lexical decision, and eye fixation times: Word frequency effects and individual differences , 1998, Memory & cognition.

[141]  Eileen Kowler Eye movements and their role in visual and cognitive processes. , 1990, Reviews of oculomotor research.

[142]  A. Inhoff,et al.  Chapter 2 – Definition and Computation of Oculomotor Measures in the Study of Cognitive Processes , 1998 .

[143]  Erik D. Reichle,et al.  Investigating the causes of wrap-up effects: Evidence from eye movements and E–Z Reader , 2009, Cognition.

[144]  Keith Rayner,et al.  Eye Movements of Highly Skilled and Average Readers: Differential Effects of Frequency and Predictability , 2005, The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology. A, Human experimental psychology.

[145]  K. Rayner,et al.  Fast priming during eye fixations in reading. , 1992, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[146]  Mario Braun,et al.  On the specificities of the inverted-optimal viewing position effect and their implications on models of eye movement control during reading , 2008, Brain Research.

[147]  Heiner Deubel,et al.  Commentary on Section 2. Attention, information processing and eye movement control. , 2000 .

[148]  Siliang,et al.  Eye Movement Control in Reading Thai and Chinese , 2011 .

[149]  Françoise Vitu,et al.  Word skipping: Implications for theories of eye movement control in reading , 1998 .

[150]  M. Posner Foundations of cognitive science , 1989 .

[151]  Christopher C. Pack,et al.  Reading impairments in schizophrenia relate to individual differences in phonological processing and oculomotor control: evidence from a gaze-contingent moving window paradigm. , 2013, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[152]  M. Brysbaert,et al.  1 Word skipping : Implications for theories of eye movement control in reading 1 , 2005 .

[153]  W. Huber,et al.  Eye movement correlates of acquired central dyslexia , 2010, Neuropsychologia.

[154]  Simon P. Liversedge,et al.  Chapter 3 – Eye Movements and Measures of Reading Time , 1998 .

[155]  Wayne S. Murray,et al.  Spatial Coordinates and Reading: Comments on Monk (1985) , 1987 .

[156]  Victor Kuperman,et al.  The effect of word position on eye-movements in sentence and paragraph reading , 2010, Quarterly journal of experimental psychology.

[157]  C. Clifton,et al.  Determinants of parafoveal preview benefit in high and low working memory capacity readers: implications for eye movement control. , 1995, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[158]  K. Rayner Eye Guidance in Reading: Fixation Locations within Words , 1979, Perception.

[159]  Reinhold Kliegl,et al.  Reading strategy modulates parafoveal-on-foveal effects in sentence reading , 2013, Quarterly journal of experimental psychology.

[160]  Joël Pynte,et al.  The consequences of violations to reading order: An eye movement analysis , 2008, Vision Research.

[161]  Ralf Engbert,et al.  Length, frequency, and predictability effects of words on eye movements in reading , 2004 .

[162]  Michel Wedel,et al.  Defining eye-fixation sequences across individuals and tasks: the Binocular-Individual Threshold (BIT) algorithm , 2010, Behavior research methods.

[163]  S. Kemper,et al.  Eye movements of young and older adults during reading. , 2007, Psychology and aging.

[164]  Keith Rayner,et al.  Eye movements, the perceptual span, and reading speed , 2010, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[165]  Shun-Nan Yang,et al.  An oculomotor-based model of eye movements in reading: The competition/interaction model , 2006, Cognitive Systems Research.

[166]  Joël Pynte,et al.  Reading as a Perceptual Process , 2000 .

[167]  G. McConkie,et al.  Chapter 4 – Determinants of Fixation Positions in Words During Reading , 1998 .

[168]  K. Rayner Eye Movements in Reading: Models and Data. , 2009 .

[169]  K. Rayner Eye movements in reading and information processing: 20 years of research. , 1998, Psychological bulletin.

[170]  Alan Kennedy,et al.  Parafoveal Processing in Word Recognition , 2000, The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology. A, Human experimental psychology.

[171]  Ming Yan,et al.  Flexible saccade-target selection in Chinese reading , 2010, Quarterly journal of experimental psychology.

[172]  A. Kennedy,et al.  Parafoveal-on-foveal interactions in word recognition , 2002, The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology. A, Human experimental psychology.

[173]  Alexander Pollatsek,et al.  Extending the E-Z Reader Model of Eye Movement Control to Chinese Readers , 2007, Cogn. Sci..

[174]  A. Inhoff,et al.  The perceptual span and oculomotor activity during the reading of Chinese sentences. , 1998, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[175]  A. Treisman,et al.  A feature-integration theory of attention , 1980, Cognitive Psychology.

[176]  J. Henderson,et al.  Effects of foveal processing difficulty on the perceptual span in reading: Implications for attention and eye movement control. , 1990 .

[177]  M. Richt Readers of Chinese extract semantic information from parafoveal words , 2009 .

[178]  G. Legge,et al.  Mr. Chips 2002: new insights from an ideal-observer model of reading , 2002, Vision Research.

[179]  Simon P. Liversedge,et al.  Orthographic familiarity influences initial eye fixation positions in reading , 2004 .

[180]  Keith Rayner,et al.  Eye movements and the perceptual span in silent and oral reading , 2012, Attention, perception & psychophysics.

[181]  Reinhold Kliegl,et al.  Parafoveal load of word N+1 modulates preprocessing effectiveness of word N+2 in Chinese reading. , 2010, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[182]  Arthur M. Jacobs,et al.  Commentary on Section 5 – Five Questions about Cognitive Models and Some Answers from Three Models of Reading , 2000 .

[183]  K. Rayner,et al.  Effects of contextual constraint on eye movements in reading: A further examination , 1996, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[184]  A. Kennedy,et al.  Parafoveal-on-foveal effects are not an artifact of mislocated saccades , 2008 .

[185]  Alexander Pollatsek,et al.  Psychology of reading, 2nd ed. , 2012 .

[186]  A. Inhoff,et al.  Temporal dynamics of the eye–voice span and eye movement control during oral reading , 2011 .

[187]  G. McConkie,et al.  Eye movements during reading: a theory of saccade initiation times , 2001, Vision Research.

[188]  A. Kennedy,et al.  Theoretical perspectives on eye movements in reading: Past controversies, current issues, and an agenda for future research , 2004 .

[189]  Alexander Pollatsek,et al.  Eye movements and non-canonical reading: Comments on Kennedy and Pynte (2008) , 2009, Vision Research.

[190]  Reinhold Kliegl,et al.  Reconstruction of eye movements during blinks , 2008, Chaos.

[191]  Reinhold Kliegl,et al.  Preview benefit and parafoveal-on-foveal effects from word n + 2. , 2007, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[192]  Lynn Huestegge,et al.  Oculomotor and linguistic determinants of reading development: A longitudinal study , 2009, Vision Research.

[193]  K. Rayner,et al.  Eye movements in reading words and sentences , 2007 .