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Original Article

Investigating the effects of background knowledge on Chinese word processing during text reading: evidence from eye movements

Yu‐Cin Jian

Department of Educational Psychology and Counselling, National Taiwan Normal University, , Taiwan

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Hwa‐Wei Ko

Corresponding Author

Graduate Institute of Learning and Instruction, National Central University, , Taiwan

Address for correspondence: Hwa‐Wei Ko, Graduate Institute of Learning and Instruction, National Central University, No. 300 Jhongda Rd., Jhongli City, Taoyuan County 32001, Taiwan. E‐mail:

hwawei@cc.ncu.edu.tw

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First published: 09 July 2012
Cited by: 5

Abstract

This study investigates the effects of background knowledge on Chinese word processing during silent reading by monitoring adult readers’ eye movements. Both higher knowledge (physics major) and lower knowledge (nonphysics major) graduate students were given physics texts to read. Higher knowledge readers spent less time rereading and had lower regression rates on unfamiliar physics words and common words in physics texts than did lower knowledge readers; they also had shorter gaze durations and fewer first‐pass fixations on familiar physics words than on unfamiliar physics words. For unfamiliar physics words and common words, both groups predominantly fixated first on the beginnings of words when they made multiple fixations on a word and on a left‐of‐centre location when they fixated only once on a word. These findings suggest that both groups comprise mature readers with strong language concepts. However, differences in background knowledge led to different reading processes at different stages of reading.

Number of times cited: 5

  • , Influences of text difficulty and reading ability on learning illustrated science texts for children: An eye movement study, Computers & Education, 113, (263), (2017).
  • , An updated review of cross-language transfer and its educational implications, Developmental Perspectives in Written Language and Literacy, 10.1075/z.206.11dur, (2017).
  • , The function of diagram with numbered arrows and text in helping readers construct kinematic representations: Evidenced from eye movements and reading tests, Computers in Human Behavior, 61, (622), (2016).
  • 2015 International Conference of Educational Innovation through Technology (EITT) Wuhan, China 2015 International Conference of Educational Innovation through Technology (EITT) IEEE , (2015). 978-1-4673-8037-9 978-1-4673-8038-6 An Eye Movement Study on the Reading Process of Automobile Maintenance Test , (2015). 194 198 7446176 , 10.1109/EITT.2015.48 http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/7446176/
  • , Context Effects in Processing of Chinese Academic Words: An Eye-Tracking Investigation, Reading Research Quarterly, 48, 4, (403), (2013).