Brysbaert, Marc, Desmet, Timothy and Drieghe, Denis (2007) How important are linguistic factors in word skipping during reading?. The British Journal of Psychology, 98 (1).
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The probability of skipping a word is influenced by its processing ease. For instance, a word that is predictable from the preceding context is skipped more often than an unpredictable word. A meta-analysis of studies examining this predictability effect reported effect sizes ranging from 0% to 13%, with an average of 8% (Brysbaert, Drieghe, & Vitu, 2005). One study does not fit within this picture: Vonk (1984) reported 23% more skipping of Dutch pronouns in sentences where the pronoun had no disambiguating value (e.g. "Mary was envious of Helen because she never looked so good") than in sentences where it did have a disambiguating value (e.g. "Mary was envious of Albert because she never looked so good"). We re-examined this ambiguity in Dutch using a task that more closely resembles normal reading and observed only 9% difference in skipping of the pronoun, bringing this linguistic effect in line with other findings.
This is a Submitted version This version's date is: 2/2007 This item is not peer reviewed
https://repository.royalholloway.ac.uk/items/bd5b6b43-aa1a-1bb2-b9a9-905dcf6466be/3/
Deposited by Research Information System (atira) on 30-May-2012 in Royal Holloway Research Online.Last modified on 30-May-2012