Developmental eye-tracking research in reading: Introduction to the special issue.
Developmental eye-tracking research in reading: Introduction to the special issue.Extending our understanding of the interplay between visual and cognitive processes during reading is essential to understand how reading develops and changes across the lifespan. Monitoring readers' eye movements provides a fine-grained online protocol of the reading process as it evolves over time, but until recently eye movements have rarely been collected for young developing and ageing people. Developmental eye-tracking constitutes an emerging and innovative field that addresses various theoretical questions related to changes in the process of reading across the lifespan and the mechanisms that drive intra-individual trajectories and create inter-individual differences among readers. The aim of this editorial is to briefly summarise the current state of the field and to outline which questions are currently being investigated and presented in this Special Issue. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)https://www.psych.uni-goettingen.de/de/education/publication-folder/ref2015-28918-002https://www.psych.uni-goettingen.de/@@site-logo/university-of-goettingen-logo.svg
Sascha Schroeder, Jukka Hyönä and Simon Liversedge
Developmental eye-tracking research in reading: Introduction to the special issue.
Journal of Cognitive Psychology
Extending our understanding of the interplay between visual and cognitive processes during reading is essential to understand how reading develops and changes across the lifespan. Monitoring readers' eye movements provides a fine-grained online protocol of the reading process as it evolves over time, but until recently eye movements have rarely been collected for young developing and ageing people. Developmental eye-tracking constitutes an emerging and innovative field that addresses various theoretical questions related to changes in the process of reading across the lifespan and the mechanisms that drive intra-individual trajectories and create inter-individual differences among readers. The aim of this editorial is to briefly summarise the current state of the field and to outline which questions are currently being investigated and presented in this Special Issue. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)
Sponsor: Volkswagen Foundation. Grant: 87191. Recipients: No recipient indicated