Eye movements of children and adults while reading television subtitles

被引:98
|
作者
d'Ydewalle, Gery [1 ]
De Bruycker, Wim
机构
[1] Univ Leuven, Dept Psychol, B-3000 Louvain, Belgium
[2] Expt Psychol Lab, Louvain, Belgium
关键词
eye movements; reading; attention; children; fixation; FOREIGN-LANGUAGE; SHOW PROMISE; INFORMATION; COMBINATIONS; ACQUISITION; PROGRAMS; DIALOG; SCRIPT; TEXT; 2ND;
D O I
10.1027/1016-9040.12.3.196
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Eye movements of children (Grade 5-6) and adults were monitored while they were watching a foreign language movie with either standard (foreign language soundtrack and native language subtitling) or reversed (foreign language subtitles and native language soundtrack) subtitling. With standard subtitling, reading behavior in the subtitle was observed, but there was a difference between one-and two-line subtitles. As two lines of text contain verbal information that cannot easily be inferred from the pictures on the screen, more regular reading occurred; a single text line is often redundant to the information in the picture, and accordingly less reading of one-line text was apparent. Reversed subtitling showed even more irregular reading patterns (e.g., more subtitles skipped, fewer fixations, longer latencies). No substantial age differences emerged, except that children took longer to shift attention to the subtitle at its onset, and showed longer fixations and shorter saccades in the text. On the whole, the results demonstrated the flexibility of the attentional system and its tuning to the several information sources available (image, soundtrack, and subtitles).
引用
收藏
页码:196 / 205
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] No association between autistic traits and contextual influences on eye-movements during reading
    Caruana, Nathan
    Brock, Jon
    PEERJ, 2014, 2
  • [42] The function of regressions in reading: Backward eye movements allow rereading
    Booth, Robert W.
    Weger, Ulrich W.
    MEMORY & COGNITION, 2013, 41 (01) : 82 - 97
  • [43] Eye movements when reading: The importance of the word to the left of fixation
    Roy-Charland, Annie
    Saint-Aubin, Jean
    Klein, Raymond M.
    MacLean, Gregory H.
    Lalande, Amanda
    Belanger, Ashley
    VISUAL COGNITION, 2012, 20 (03) : 328 - 355
  • [44] Eye movements and attention in reading, scene perception, and visual search
    Rayner, Keith
    QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2009, 62 (08) : 1457 - 1506
  • [45] Eye movements reveal readers' lexical quality and reading experience
    Taylor, Jessica Nelson
    Perfetti, Charles A.
    READING AND WRITING, 2016, 29 (06) : 1069 - 1103
  • [46] To Name or Not to Name: Eye Movements and Semantic Processing in RAN and Reading
    Chau, Luan Tuyen
    Vulchanova, Mila Dimitrova
    Talcott, Joel B.
    BRAIN SCIENCES, 2021, 11 (07)
  • [47] Eye movements of dyslexic children when reading in a regular orthography
    Hutzler, F
    Wimmer, H
    BRAIN AND LANGUAGE, 2004, 89 (01) : 235 - 242
  • [48] Eye movements in the process of reading as an indicator of development of reading skill
    Bezrukikh M.M.
    Ivanov V.V.
    Human Physiology, 2013, 39 (1) : 68 - 77
  • [49] Children's Eye-Movements During Reading Reflect the Quality of Lexical Representations: An Individual Differences Approach
    Luke, Steven G.
    Henderson, John M.
    Ferreira, Fernanda
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-LEARNING MEMORY AND COGNITION, 2015, 41 (06) : 1675 - 1683
  • [50] Eye Movements and the Perceptual Span During First- and Second-Language Sentence Reading in Bilingual Older Adults
    Whitford, Veronica
    Titone, Debra
    PSYCHOLOGY AND AGING, 2016, 31 (01) : 58 - 70