Bernhard Angele
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View article: How low can you go? Tracking eye movements during reading at different sampling rates
How low can you go? Tracking eye movements during reading at different sampling rates Open
View article: Measuring the Semantic Priming Effect Across Many Languages
Measuring the Semantic Priming Effect Across Many Languages Open
Semantic priming has been studied for nearly 50 years across various experimental manipulations and theoretical frameworks. Although previous studies provide insight into the cognitive underpinnings of semantic representations, they have s…
View article: Measuring the Semantic Priming Effect Across Many Languages
Measuring the Semantic Priming Effect Across Many Languages Open
Semantic priming has been studied for nearly 50 years across various experimental manipulations and theoretical frameworks. Although previous studies provide insight into the cognitive underpinnings of semantic representations, they have s…
View article: GazeGenie: Enhancing Multi-Line Reading Research with an Innovative User-Friendly Tool
GazeGenie: Enhancing Multi-Line Reading Research with an Innovative User-Friendly Tool Open
In the study of reading, eye-tracking technology offers unique insights into the time-course of how individuals extract information from text. A significant hurdle in using multi-line paragraph stimuli is the need to align eye gaze positio…
View article: Individual differences in word skipping during reading in English as L2
Individual differences in word skipping during reading in English as L2 Open
The Multilingual Eye-movement Corpus (MECO; Siegelman et al., 2022) contains data from unbalanced bilinguals reading in their first language (L1) for a variety of languages and in English as their second language (L2). We analyzed word ski…
View article: Closing the eye-tracking gap in reading research
Closing the eye-tracking gap in reading research Open
Citation: Angele B and Duñabeitia JA (2024) Closing the eye-tracking gap in reading research. Front. Psychol. 15:1425219. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1425219
View article: Breathing Life Into Meta-Analytic Methods
Breathing Life Into Meta-Analytic Methods Open
Meta-analyses have become indispensable in the behavioral sciences, combining and summarizing data from multiple studies. While they offer many advantages (e.g., increased power, higher generality, and resolving conflicting findings), they…
View article: Dual input stream transformer for vertical drift correction in eye-tracking reading data
Dual input stream transformer for vertical drift correction in eye-tracking reading data Open
We introduce a novel Dual Input Stream Transformer (DIST) for the challenging problem of assigning fixation points from eye-tracking data collected during passage reading to the line of text that the reader was actually focused on. This po…
View article: Reading(,) with and without commas
Reading(,) with and without commas Open
All major writing systems mandate the use of commas to separate clauses and list items. However, casual writers often omit mandatory commas. Little empirical or theoretical research has been done on the effect that omitting mandatory comma…
View article: Does online masked priming pass the test? The effects of prime exposure duration on masked identity priming
Does online masked priming pass the test? The effects of prime exposure duration on masked identity priming Open
View article: Measuring the Semantic Priming Effect Across Many Languages
Measuring the Semantic Priming Effect Across Many Languages Open
Semantic priming has been studied for nearly 50 years across various experimental manipulations and theoretical frameworks. Although previous studies provide insight into the cognitive underpinnings of semantic representations, they have s…
View article: Measuring the Semantic Priming Effect Across Many Languages
Measuring the Semantic Priming Effect Across Many Languages Open
Semantic priming has been studied for nearly 50 years across various experimental manipulations and theoretical frameworks. Although previous studies provide insight into the cognitive underpinnings of semantic representations, they have s…
View article: Sensory gating is related to positive and disorganised schizotypy in contrast to smooth pursuit eye movements and latent inhibition
Sensory gating is related to positive and disorganised schizotypy in contrast to smooth pursuit eye movements and latent inhibition Open
View article: Predicting the unpredicted: No relationship between ‘the’-skipping and response inhibition
Predicting the unpredicted: No relationship between ‘the’-skipping and response inhibition Open
Skilled readers are likely to skip short, high-frequency words such as “the” in English. When deciding to skip such words, readers fail to take into account the preceding sentence context and will frequently skip an upcoming word that look…
View article: Repetition causes confusion: Insights to word segmentation during Chinese reading.
Repetition causes confusion: Insights to word segmentation during Chinese reading. Open
Since there are no spaces between words to mark word boundaries in Chinese, it is common to see 2 identical neighboring characters in natural text. Usually, this occurs when there are 2 adjacent words containing the same character (we will…
View article: Reading is disrupted by intelligible background speech: Evidence from eye-tracking.
Reading is disrupted by intelligible background speech: Evidence from eye-tracking. Open
It is not well understood whether background speech affects the initial processing of words during reading or only the later processes of sentence integration. Additionally, it is not clear how eye movements support text comprehension in t…
View article: Reading is disrupted by intelligible background speech: Evidence from eye-tracking (data and materials)
Reading is disrupted by intelligible background speech: Evidence from eye-tracking (data and materials) Open
View article: Acknowledgment of Ad Hoc Reviewers
Acknowledgment of Ad Hoc Reviewers Open
View article: Distraction by deviant sounds during reading: An eye-movement study
Distraction by deviant sounds during reading: An eye-movement study Open
Oddball studies have shown that sounds unexpectedly deviating from an otherwise repeated sequence capture attention away from the task at hand. While such distraction is typically regarded as potentially important in everyday life, previou…
View article: Beyond the leftward limit of the perceptual span: Parafoveal processing to the left of fixation in Chinese reading
Beyond the leftward limit of the perceptual span: Parafoveal processing to the left of fixation in Chinese reading Open
View article: Auditory Distraction During Reading: A Bayesian Meta-Analysis of a Continuing Controversy
Auditory Distraction During Reading: A Bayesian Meta-Analysis of a Continuing Controversy Open
Everyday reading occurs in different settings, such as on the train to work, in a busy cafeteria, or at home while listening to music. In these situations, readers are exposed to external auditory stimulation from nearby noise, speech, or …
View article: Acknowledgment of Ad Hoc Reviewers
Acknowledgment of Ad Hoc Reviewers Open
View article: Skipping of Chinese characters does not rely on word-based processing
Skipping of Chinese characters does not rely on word-based processing Open
View article: Acknowledgment of Ad Hoc Reviewers
Acknowledgment of Ad Hoc Reviewers Open
View article: False positives and other statistical errors in standard analyses of eye movements in reading
False positives and other statistical errors in standard analyses of eye movements in reading Open
View article: Parafoveal preview effects from word N + 1 and word N + 2 during reading: A critical review and Bayesian meta-analysis
Parafoveal preview effects from word N + 1 and word N + 2 during reading: A critical review and Bayesian meta-analysis Open
View article: Corrigendum to “Do successor effects in reading reflect lexical parafoveal processing? Evidence from corpus-based and experimental eye movement data” [J. Mem. Lang. 79–80 (2015) 76–96]
Corrigendum to “Do successor effects in reading reflect lexical parafoveal processing? Evidence from corpus-based and experimental eye movement data” [J. Mem. Lang. 79–80 (2015) 76–96] Open
In the past, most research on eye movements during reading involved a limited number of subjects reading sentences with specific experimental manipulations on target words. Such experiments usually only analyzed eye-movements measures on a…
View article: Two stages of parafoveal processing during reading: Evidence from a display change detection task
Two stages of parafoveal processing during reading: Evidence from a display change detection task Open
We used a display change detection paradigm (Slattery, Angele, & Rayner Human Perception and Performance, 37, 1924-1938 2011) to investigate whether display change detection uses orthographic regularity and whether detection is affected by…
View article: Skipping syntactically illegal the previews: The role of predictability.
Skipping syntactically illegal the previews: The role of predictability. Open
Readers tend to skip words, particularly when they are short, frequent, or predictable. Angele and Rayner (2013) recently reported that readers are often unable to detect syntactic anomalies in parafoveal vision. In the present study, we m…
View article: False positive rates in standard analyses of eye movements in reading
False positive rates in standard analyses of eye movements in reading Open
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