Eye Fixations Predict Reading Comprehension: The Relationships between Reading Skill, Reading Speed, and Visual Inspection

This experiment addressed the question of whether reading comprehension and speed could be predicted by eye fixations. From a sample of university students who completed tests of reading comprehension and vocabulary, we selected a group of highly skilled readers and a group of less skilled readers. These two groups then read sentences as their eye movements were monitored, with fixation locations and durations recorded. A discriminant function analysis showed that fixation duration was a successful predictor of reading comprehension, but that the number of fixations, regressive fixations, reading speed, and vocabulary were not reliable predictors. A multiple regression analysis revealed that reading speed was predicted by the number of fixations, the average fixation duration, and the duration of the final fixation upon the sentence, but there was no relationship with reading ability. Highly skilled readers are those who can extract information efficiently, but are not necessarily those who have fast overall reading rates.

[1]  G Underwood,et al.  Information Influences the Pattern of Eye Fixations during Sentence Comprehension , 1988, Perception.

[2]  Wayne S. Murray,et al.  THE COMPONENTS OF READING TIME: EYE MOVEMENT PATTERNS OF GOOD AND POOR READERS , 1987 .

[3]  Robert H. Logie,et al.  Components of fluent reading , 1985 .

[4]  K. Rayner Eye movements in reading and information processing. , 1978, Psychological bulletin.

[5]  D. Aaronson,et al.  Performance Theories for Sentence Coding: Some Quantitative Evidence. , 1976 .

[6]  K. Rayner,et al.  Lexical complexity and fixation times in reading: Effects of word frequency, verb complexity, and lexical ambiguity , 1986, Memory & cognition.

[7]  G Underwood,et al.  Reading long words embedded in sentences: informativeness of word halves affects eye movements. , 1989, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[8]  K. Rayner,et al.  Contextual effects on word perception and eye movements during reading , 1981 .

[9]  M A Just,et al.  A theory of reading: from eye fixations to comprehension. , 1980, Psychological review.

[10]  Arthur C. Graesser,et al.  Structural components of reading time , 1980 .

[11]  D. Noton,et al.  Eye movements and visual perception. , 1971, Scientific American.

[12]  Lyn Frazier,et al.  The interaction of syntax and semantics during sentence processing: eye movements in the analysis of semantically biased sentences , 1983 .

[13]  W S Murray,et al.  Spatial Coding in the Processing of Anaphor by Good and Poor Readers: Evidence from Eye Movement Analyses , 1988, The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology. A, Human experimental psychology.

[14]  B. J. Davidson,et al.  26 – Eye Movements in Reading Disability1 , 1983 .

[15]  James L. McClelland,et al.  Sensory and cognitive determinants of reading speed , 1975 .

[16]  H. Wilkinson Wide Range Eye and Head Movement Monitor , 1976 .

[17]  G Underwood,et al.  How Do Readers Know Where to Look Next? Local Information Distributions Influence Eye Fixations , 1990, The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology. A, Human experimental psychology.