22 research outputs found

    Efficient Word Segmentation is Preserved in Older Adult Readers: Evidence from Eye Movements during Chinese Reading.

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    These data flles are for two eye movement experiments investigating the process of word segmentation for young and older adult Chinese readers.</p

    Adult Age Differences in Parafoveal Preview Effects in Reading: Evidence from Chinese

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    These are data for an eye movement experiment that examined parafoveal processing of two word followed a fixated word during reading (words N+1 and N+2) by young (18-30 years) and older (65+ years) adult readers. The experiment was conducted in Chinese with native Chinese readers. The data files provide eye movement data with the R script showing the linear mixed effects modelling code used to analyse these data. Word and sentence level data are included, alongside files for specific word-level eye movement measures.The files are separated into eye movement data for word N (the fixated word), word N+1 (the next word along) and word N+2 (the second word along). Measures reported are first-fixation duration (FFD), single fixation duration (SFD), gaze duration (GD), total reading time (TT), regressions out (probability of a first pass regression from a word) and word-skipping (SKIP).</div

    Ageing and Pattern Complexity Effects in Chinese Reading

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    The file contains data and R code for the analysis of data for an experiment investigating adult age differences in eye movements during Chinese reading. The file also includes a list of the stimulu used in this experiment

    Aging and Predictability Data and Files

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    This folder contains the data file, analysis script and stimulus set for an eye movement experiment that examined adult age groups differences in effects of word predictability on eye movements during reading.ReferenceZhao, S., Li, L., Chang, M., Xu, T., Zhang, K., Wang, J., & Paterson, K.B. (2019). Older adults make greater use of word predictability in Chinese reading. Psychology and Aging, in press.</div

    Ageing and Word Predictability in Chinese Reading: One-Character Words

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    These are the datafile and R analysis script used to analyse one-word target words in sentences in Chinese where the target words are either highly predictable or less predictable from the prior sentences. There were 40 young adult (aged 18-30 years) and 40 older adult (aged 65+ years) participants and 63 stimulus sets

    Investigating eye movements in reading for Chinese four-character collocations

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    This dataset is from two experiments using eye movement methodology to assess the processing of four-character collocations in Chinese reading. The data resource including data files, R code, and stimulus sets for two experiments.</p

    Flexible Parafoveal Encoding of Character Order Supports Word Predictability Effects in Chinese Reading: Evidence from Eye Movements

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    These are data for an eye movement experiment investigating the influence of contextual predictability on parafoveal processing of character transpositions during Chinsese reading. The files include an excel file containing the eye movement data and a file containing the code used to conduct linear mixed-effects analyses of these data in R

    Contextual Predictability and Parafoveal Processing in Chinese Reading

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    This folder contains data and analysis files for an experiment on word predictability effects on parafoveal word processing during Chinese reading. The sentences contain either a highly predictable or less predictable word. A boundary paradigm with an invisible boundary immediately before the target word was used to provide valid and invalid previews of the target words. Valid previews were identical to the target. Invalid previews were visually dissimilar nonwords. The key variables were skipping rates and first pass reading times for the target word

    Frequency & Predictability Effects on Eye Movements of Chinese Developing Readers

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    This is a dataset for an experiment on the effects of word frequency and the contextual predictability of words on the eye movements of developing Chinese readers

    Eye Movements and the Perceptual Span in Mongolian Reading

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    This folder contains a data file and analysis script for an experiment examining reading times by native Mongolian readers. In this experiment, text in vertical and horizontal orientations was presented either entirely as normal or in a gaze-contingent moving window paradigm in which text was presented normally within a only a narrow region around fixation. Five windows were used: small symmetrical windows extending 0.5 degrees each side of fixation, small and large asymmetric windows extending further in the direction of reading (0.5 degrees counter to the direction of reading and either 1.5 or 2.5 degrees in the direction of reading), and small and large asymmetrical windows extending further counter to the direction of reading (extended 0.5 degrees in the direction or reading and either 1.5 or 2.5 degrees counter to the direction of reading)
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