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The Basics: How We Read
In understanding eyetracking results and data, it's helpful
to understand the process of reading. People typically recognize
words as a whole; we don't look at individual letters in each
word.
According to psycholinguist Keith
Rayner of the University of Massachusetts at Amherst,
eyes do not move smoothly across the text as we read. Instead,
the typical reader behavior is to look at a word or several
words in a group, and pause our eyes there briefly. This is
called a "fixation," and it takes about 0.25 seconds
on average.
After a fixation, we move our eyes to the next word or group
of words; this movement is called a "saccade" and
takes only 0.1 seconds. (People often skip over short or predictable
words such as "of," "in," "a,"
etc.) After this pattern is repeated once or twice, we pause
to comprehend the phrase just viewed (which on average takes
0.3 to 0.5 seconds).
According to Rayner, all these fixations and saccades result
in 95 percent of all college-level people reading between
200 and 400 words per minute; 300 words per minute is the
average.
As you read about Eyetrack III findings on this website,
you'll often see references to "fixations." A fixation
is a brief, but measurable, pause of the eye when looking
at a word or phrase. "Saccades" are the paths between
these fixations
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