The independence of syntactic processing
- F. Ferreira, C. Clifton
- Psychology
- 1 June 1986
Eye movements in reading and information processing :
- C. Clifton, F. Ferreira, Elizabeth Schotter
- Psychology
- 2015
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jml.2015.07.004 0749-596X/ 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. q A comprehensive review and critical analysis of Keith Rayner’s entire body of research would require…
Eye Movements of Highly Skilled and Average Readers: Differential Effects of Frequency and Predictability
- J. Ashby, K. Rayner, C. Clifton
- PsychologyThe Quarterly journal of experimental psychology…
- 1 August 2005
It appears that reading skill can interact with predictability to affect the word recognition processes used during silent reading.
Psychology of reading
- K. Rayner, A. Pollatsek, J. Ashby, C. Clifton
- Education
- 1989
Preface. Part 1. Background Information. 1. Introduction and Preliminary Information. 2. Writing Systems. 3. Word Perception I: Some Basic Issues and Methods. Part 2. Skilled Reading of Text. 4. The…
Eye movements in reading words and sentences
- C. Clifton, A. Staub, K. Rayner
- Psychology
- 2007
Successive cyclicity in the grammar and the parser
- L. Frazier, C. Clifton
- Linguistics
- 1 May 1989
It is proposed that, in processing a “long” movement (across more than one clause), the parser must assign the filler to a special “non-argument” position in a successive cylic fas...
Adjunct attachment is not a form of lexical ambiguity resolution
- M. Traxler, M. Pickering, C. Clifton
- Linguistics
- 1 November 1998
Three eye-tracking experiments investigated ambiguity resolution in sentences containing adjunct modifiers. The experiments tested readers' response to sentences that began with a noun phrase complex…
Another word on parsing relative clauses: Eyetracking evidence from Spanish and English
- M. Carreiras, C. Clifton
- LinguisticsMemory & Cognition
- 1 September 1999
Spanish and English readers’ eye movements while reading exactly comparable sentences in their native languages are compared and a significant reading time advantage is found in Spanish when it is forced to modify the first noun phrase, but in English when the relative clause is forcedto modify the second noun phrase.
Determinants of parafoveal preview benefit in high and low working memory capacity readers: implications for eye movement control.
- S. Kennison, C. Clifton
- PsychologyJournal of Experimental Psychology. Learning…
- 1995
The experiment in this article extended studies by A. W. Inhoff and K. Rayner and J. M. Ferreira to determine how the printed frequency of two adjacent words influenced the benefit of having parafoveal preview of the 2nd word.
Comprehending Sentences with Long-Distance Dependencies
- C. Clifton, L. Frazier
- Linguistics
- 1989
In the process of comprehending a sentence, a reader or listener identifies its grammatical constituents and their relationships. The resulting grammatical analysis is eventually combined with…
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