Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, 2021
This study investigated the extent to which varying interword spacing influences eye movement dur... more This study investigated the extent to which varying interword spacing influences eye movement during reading in Arabic. Previous works conducted in Latin-script languages suggested that interword spaces facilitated word recognition. On the other hand, word recognition was inhibited when interword spaces were either removed or replaced by other characters (Rayner et al., 1998; Sheridan et al., 2013). We focused on the influence of interword spaces on reading Arabic which is characterized by the use of interword spaces and the position-informative allographic system. Based on an eye tracking experiment in which subjects read Arabic sentences presented in three levels of interword spacing and two levels of target word frequency, we found that eliminating interword spaces did not significantly inhibit reading, yet widening interword spaces exerted a facilitative effect. We argued that the effect of eliminating interword spaces was compensated by the ligating properties of Arabic letters during sentence reading, i.e. Arabic ligatures were position-informative which provided sufficient visual cues for word recognition regardless of the presence of interword spaces.
Phonological awareness is the ability to perceive and manipulate the sounds of spoken words. It i... more Phonological awareness is the ability to perceive and manipulate the sounds of spoken words. It is considered a good predictor of reading and spelling abilities. In the current study, we used an eye-tracking procedure to measure fixation differences while adults completed three conditions of phonological awareness in Emirati Arabic (EA): (1) explicit instructions for onset consonant matching (OCM), (2) implicit instructions for segmentation of initial consonant (SIC), and (3) rhyme matching (RM). We hypothesized that fixation indices would vary according to the experimental conditions. We expected explicit instructions to facilitate task performance. Thus, eye movements should reflect more efficient fixation patterns in the explicit OCM condition in comparison to the implicit SIC condition. Moreover, since Arabic is consonant-based, we hypothesized that participants would perform better in the consonant conditions (i.e., OCM and SIC) than in the rhyme condition (i.e., RM). Finally, we expected that providing feedback during practice trials would facilitate participants' performance overall. Response accuracy, expressed as a percentage of correct responses, was recorded alongside eye movement data. Results show that performance was significantly compromised in the RM condition, where targets received more fixations of longer average duration, and significantly longer gaze durations in comparison to the OCM and SIC conditions. Response accuracy was also significantly lower in the RM condition. Our results indicate that eye-tracking can be used as a tool to test phonological awareness skills and shows differences in performance between tasks containing a vowel or consonant manipulation.
This study investigated the extent to which varying interword spacing influences eye movement dur... more This study investigated the extent to which varying interword spacing influences eye movement during reading in Arabic. Previous works conducted in Latin-script languages suggested that interword spaces facilitated word recognition. On the other hand, word recognition was inhibited when interword spaces were either removed or replaced by other characters (Rayner et al., 1998; Sheridan et al., 2013). We focused on the influence of interword spaces on reading Arabic which is characterized by the use of interword spaces and the position-informative allographic system. Based on an eye tracking experiment in which subjects read Arabic sentences presented in three levels of interword spacing and two levels of target word frequency, we found that eliminating interword spaces did not significantly inhibit reading, yet widening interword spaces exerted a facilitative effect. We argued that the effect of eliminating interword spaces was compensated by the ligating properties of Arabic letters...
Phonological awareness is the ability to perceive and manipulate the sounds of spoken words. It i... more Phonological awareness is the ability to perceive and manipulate the sounds of spoken words. It is considered a good predictor of reading and spelling abilities. In the current study, we used an eye-tracking procedure to measure fixation differences while adults completed three conditions of phonological awareness in Emirati Arabic (EA): (1) explicit instructions for onset consonant matching (OCM), (2) implicit instructions for segmentation of initial consonant (SIC), and (3) rhyme matching (RM). We hypothesized that fixation indices would vary according to the experimental conditions. We expected explicit instructions to facilitate task performance. Thus, eye movements should reflect more efficient fixation patterns in the explicit OCM condition in comparison to the implicit SIC condition. Moreover, since Arabic is consonant-based, we hypothesized that participants would perform better in the consonant conditions (i.e., OCM and SIC) than in the rhyme condition (i.e., RM). Finally, we expected that providing feedback during practice trials would facilitate participants' performance overall. Response accuracy, expressed as a percentage of correct responses, was recorded alongside eye movement data. Results show that performance was significantly compromised in the RM condition, where targets received more fixations of longer average duration, and significantly longer gaze durations in comparison to the OCM and SIC conditions. Response accuracy was also significantly lower in the RM condition. Our results indicate that eye-tracking can be used as a tool to test phonological awareness skills and shows differences in performance between tasks containing a vowel or consonant manipulation.
Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, 2021
This study investigated the extent to which varying interword spacing influences eye movement dur... more This study investigated the extent to which varying interword spacing influences eye movement during reading in Arabic. Previous works conducted in Latin-script languages suggested that interword spaces facilitated word recognition. On the other hand, word recognition was inhibited when interword spaces were either removed or replaced by other characters (Rayner et al., 1998; Sheridan et al., 2013). We focused on the influence of interword spaces on reading Arabic which is characterized by the use of interword spaces and the position-informative allographic system. Based on an eye tracking experiment in which subjects read Arabic sentences presented in three levels of interword spacing and two levels of target word frequency, we found that eliminating interword spaces did not significantly inhibit reading, yet widening interword spaces exerted a facilitative effect. We argued that the effect of eliminating interword spaces was compensated by the ligating properties of Arabic letters during sentence reading, i.e. Arabic ligatures were position-informative which provided sufficient visual cues for word recognition regardless of the presence of interword spaces.
Phonological awareness is the ability to perceive and manipulate the sounds of spoken words. It i... more Phonological awareness is the ability to perceive and manipulate the sounds of spoken words. It is considered a good predictor of reading and spelling abilities. In the current study, we used an eye-tracking procedure to measure fixation differences while adults completed three conditions of phonological awareness in Emirati Arabic (EA): (1) explicit instructions for onset consonant matching (OCM), (2) implicit instructions for segmentation of initial consonant (SIC), and (3) rhyme matching (RM). We hypothesized that fixation indices would vary according to the experimental conditions. We expected explicit instructions to facilitate task performance. Thus, eye movements should reflect more efficient fixation patterns in the explicit OCM condition in comparison to the implicit SIC condition. Moreover, since Arabic is consonant-based, we hypothesized that participants would perform better in the consonant conditions (i.e., OCM and SIC) than in the rhyme condition (i.e., RM). Finally, we expected that providing feedback during practice trials would facilitate participants' performance overall. Response accuracy, expressed as a percentage of correct responses, was recorded alongside eye movement data. Results show that performance was significantly compromised in the RM condition, where targets received more fixations of longer average duration, and significantly longer gaze durations in comparison to the OCM and SIC conditions. Response accuracy was also significantly lower in the RM condition. Our results indicate that eye-tracking can be used as a tool to test phonological awareness skills and shows differences in performance between tasks containing a vowel or consonant manipulation.
This study investigated the extent to which varying interword spacing influences eye movement dur... more This study investigated the extent to which varying interword spacing influences eye movement during reading in Arabic. Previous works conducted in Latin-script languages suggested that interword spaces facilitated word recognition. On the other hand, word recognition was inhibited when interword spaces were either removed or replaced by other characters (Rayner et al., 1998; Sheridan et al., 2013). We focused on the influence of interword spaces on reading Arabic which is characterized by the use of interword spaces and the position-informative allographic system. Based on an eye tracking experiment in which subjects read Arabic sentences presented in three levels of interword spacing and two levels of target word frequency, we found that eliminating interword spaces did not significantly inhibit reading, yet widening interword spaces exerted a facilitative effect. We argued that the effect of eliminating interword spaces was compensated by the ligating properties of Arabic letters...
Phonological awareness is the ability to perceive and manipulate the sounds of spoken words. It i... more Phonological awareness is the ability to perceive and manipulate the sounds of spoken words. It is considered a good predictor of reading and spelling abilities. In the current study, we used an eye-tracking procedure to measure fixation differences while adults completed three conditions of phonological awareness in Emirati Arabic (EA): (1) explicit instructions for onset consonant matching (OCM), (2) implicit instructions for segmentation of initial consonant (SIC), and (3) rhyme matching (RM). We hypothesized that fixation indices would vary according to the experimental conditions. We expected explicit instructions to facilitate task performance. Thus, eye movements should reflect more efficient fixation patterns in the explicit OCM condition in comparison to the implicit SIC condition. Moreover, since Arabic is consonant-based, we hypothesized that participants would perform better in the consonant conditions (i.e., OCM and SIC) than in the rhyme condition (i.e., RM). Finally, we expected that providing feedback during practice trials would facilitate participants' performance overall. Response accuracy, expressed as a percentage of correct responses, was recorded alongside eye movement data. Results show that performance was significantly compromised in the RM condition, where targets received more fixations of longer average duration, and significantly longer gaze durations in comparison to the OCM and SIC conditions. Response accuracy was also significantly lower in the RM condition. Our results indicate that eye-tracking can be used as a tool to test phonological awareness skills and shows differences in performance between tasks containing a vowel or consonant manipulation.
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