Literature DB >> 21744985

Coregistration of eye movements and EEG in natural reading: analyses and review.

Olaf Dimigen1, Werner Sommer, Annette Hohlfeld, Arthur M Jacobs, Reinhold Kliegl.   

Abstract

Brain-electric correlates of reading have traditionally been studied with word-by-word presentation, a condition that eliminates important aspects of the normal reading process and precludes direct comparisons between neural activity and oculomotor behavior. In the present study, we investigated effects of word predictability on eye movements (EM) and fixation-related brain potentials (FRPs) during natural sentence reading. Electroencephalogram (EEG) and EM (via video-based eye tracking) were recorded simultaneously while subjects read heterogeneous German sentences, moving their eyes freely over the text. FRPs were time-locked to first-pass reading fixations and analyzed according to the cloze probability of the currently fixated word. We replicated robust effects of word predictability on EMs and the N400 component in FRPs. The data were then used to model the relation among fixation duration, gaze duration, and N400 amplitude, and to trace the time course of EEG effects relative to effects in EM behavior. In an extended Methodological Discussion section, we review 4 technical and data-analytical problems that need to be addressed when FRPs are recorded in free-viewing situations (such as reading, visual search, or scene perception) and propose solutions. Results suggest that EEG recordings during normal vision are feasible and useful to consolidate findings from EEG and eye-tracking studies.

Mesh:

Year:  2011        PMID: 21744985     DOI: 10.1037/a0023885

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Exp Psychol Gen        ISSN: 0022-1015


  100 in total

1.  Neural saccadic response estimation during natural viewing.

Authors:  Sangita Dandekar; Claudio Privitera; Thom Carney; Stanley A Klein
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2011-12-14       Impact factor: 2.714

2.  Never Seem to Find the Time: Evaluating the Physiological Time Course of Visual Word Recognition with Regression Analysis of Single Item ERPs.

Authors:  Sarah Laszlo; Kara D Federmeier
Journal:  Lang Cogn Process       Date:  2014

Review 3.  Eye movements and brain electric potentials during reading.

Authors:  Reinhold Kliegl; Michael Dambacher; Olaf Dimigen; Arthur M Jacobs; Werner Sommer
Journal:  Psychol Res       Date:  2011-09-14

4.  How the depth of processing modulates emotional interference - evidence from EEG and pupil diameter data.

Authors:  Marie Luise Schreiter; Witold X Chmielewski; Moritz Mückschel; Tjalf Ziemssen; Christian Beste
Journal:  Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci       Date:  2019-10       Impact factor: 3.282

5.  Refixation control in free viewing: a specialized mechanism divulged by eye-movement-related brain activity.

Authors:  Andrey R Nikolaev; Radha Nila Meghanathan; Cees van Leeuwen
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2018-08-15       Impact factor: 2.714

6.  Surviving blind decomposition: A distributional analysis of the time-course of complex word recognition.

Authors:  Daniel Schmidtke; Kazunaga Matsuki; Victor Kuperman
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn       Date:  2017-04-27       Impact factor: 3.051

7.  The norepinephrine system affects specific neurophysiological subprocesses in the modulation of inhibitory control by working memory demands.

Authors:  Witold X Chmielewski; Moritz Mückschel; Tjalf Ziemssen; Christian Beste
Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp       Date:  2016-08-13       Impact factor: 5.038

8.  What Color Was It? A Psychophysical Paradigm for Tracking Subjective Progress in Continuous Tasks.

Authors:  Anna Kosovicheva; Peter J Bex
Journal:  Perception       Date:  2019-11-05       Impact factor: 1.490

9.  Neurophysiological, Oculomotor, and Computational Modeling of Impaired Reading Ability in Schizophrenia.

Authors:  Elisa C Dias; Heather Sheridan; Antígona Martínez; Pejman Sehatpour; Gail Silipo; Stephanie Rohrig; Ayelet Hochman; Pamela D Butler; Matthew J Hoptman; Nadine Revheim; Daniel C Javitt
Journal:  Schizophr Bull       Date:  2021-01-23       Impact factor: 9.306

10.  An electrophysiological analysis of contextual and temporal constraints on parafoveal word processing.

Authors:  Horacio A Barber; Maartje van der Meij; Marta Kutas
Journal:  Psychophysiology       Date:  2012-11-15       Impact factor: 4.016

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