Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4034089 Vision Research 2012 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Word reading speed in peripheral vision is slower when words are in close proximity of other words (Chung, 2004). This word crowding effect could arise as a consequence of interaction of low-level letter features between words, or the interaction between high-level holistic representations of words. We evaluated these two hypotheses by examining how word crowding changes for five configurations of flanking words: the control condition – flanking words were oriented upright; scrambled – letters in each flanking word were scrambled in order; horizontal-flip – each flanking word was the left–right mirror-image of the original; letter-flip – each letter of the flanking word was the left–right mirror-image of the original; and vertical-flip – each flanking word was the up–down mirror-image of the original. The low-level letter feature interaction hypothesis predicts similar word crowding effect for all the different flanker configurations, while the high-level holistic representation hypothesis predicts less word crowding effect for all the alternative flanker conditions, compared with the control condition. We found that oral reading speed for words flanked above and below by other words, measured at 10° eccentricity in the nasal field, showed the same dependence on the vertical separation between the target and its flanking words, for the various flanker configurations. The result was also similar when we rotated the flanking words by 90° to disrupt the periodic vertical pattern, which presumably is the main structure in words. The remarkably similar word crowding effect irrespective of the flanker configurations suggests that word crowding arises as a consequence of interactions of low-level letter features.

► We examined whether word crowding was due to low- or high-level factors. ► We measured performance for recognizing words flanked above and below by flankers. ► Flankers were real words, or word-like strings of different configurations. ► Crowding effects were similar across all flanker configurations. ► Word crowding arises as the result of interactions of low-level letter features.

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Life Sciences Neuroscience Sensory Systems
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