Refine
Year of publication
- 2014 (178) (remove)
Document Type
- Part of a Book (178) (remove)
Language
- German (178) (remove)
Keywords
- Deutsch (57)
- Institut für Deutsche Sprache <Mannheim> (28)
- Linguistik (21)
- Germanistik (20)
- Institut für Deutsche Sprache (18)
- Computerunterstützte Lexikographie (14)
- Gastwissenschaftler (13)
- Wissenschaftsgeschichte (13)
- Korpus <Linguistik> (10)
- Sprachwandel (8)
Publicationstate
- Veröffentlichungsversion (92)
- Zweitveröffentlichung (9)
- Postprint (1)
Reviewstate
- (Verlags)-Lektorat (94)
- Verlags-Lektorat (5)
- Peer-review (4)
- Peer-Review (3)
- (Verlags)Lektorat (1)
Publisher
- Institut für Deutsche Sprache (60)
- De Gruyter (28)
- de Gruyter (28)
- Stauffenburg (12)
- Lang (9)
- Springer (4)
- Narr (3)
- Olms (3)
- Winter (3)
- Dr. Kovač (2)
In recent years, reading has become an increasingly digital experience. In addition to various subjective impressions about the quality of reading from digital media, e.g. that it is more effortful than reading conventional books, a number of more scientific questions arise at the interface of reading research and book studies. Here, we summarize several new insights on reading effort and reading behavior on digital media. Part one reviews a study in which young and elderly adults read short texts on three different reading devices: a paper page, an e-reader and a tablet computer and answered comprehension questions about them while their eye movements and EEG were recorded. Older adults showed faster mean fixation durations and lower EEG theta band voltage density – known to covary with memory encoding and retrieval – when reading from a tablet computer in comparison to the other devices. Young adults showed comparable fixation durations and theta activity for all three devices. These results can be explained by better text discriminability (higher contrast) of the tablet computer. Older readers may benefit from this enhanced contrast because contrast sensitivity decreases with age. In the second part, we present an explorative study about the influence of font type and typographic alignment (flush left vs. justified) on reading from a tablet computer. Importantly, the eyes do not fall between – increasingly larger – spaces, as expected, but – to the contrary – use these spaces for planning an optimal fixation of the next word. In summary, the perspective presented here provides initial evidence about the fruitfulness of interdisciplinary research between experimental reading, neurocognition and book studies.
Das 50-jährige IDS
(2014)