An approach to the study of microsaccades during reading using wavelets

Autores
Arriola, Juan M.; Álvarez, Marcela P.; Castro, Liliana Raquel; Agamennoni, Osvaldo Enrique; Fernández, Gerardo
Año de publicación
2017
Idioma
inglés
Tipo de recurso
documento de conferencia
Estado
versión publicada
Descripción
Reading requires the integration of several central cognitive subsystems from attention and oculomotor control to word identification and language comprehension. When reading, the eyes alternate between long movements and relative stillness, that are called saccadic movements and fixations, respectively. The average fixation lasts for 150 to 250 ms and it is composed by three movements called microsaccades (or microsaccadic movements), tremor and drift. Drift and tremor are slow movements with small amplitude; microsaccades represent a ballistic component of fixational eye movements. Then, microsaccades are characterized as roughly linear movement epochs with durations up to 30ms and a frequency of one to two per second in fixations not related with reading. There are just a few works analyzing microsaccades while subjects are processing complex information and fewer when doing predictions about upcoming events. In all of them there is evidence that microsaccades are sensitive to changes of perceptual inputs as well as modulations of cognitive states. Changes in perceptual inputs are related to the type of sentences (low/high predictability, proverbs) and the characteristics of the words in the sentence (frequency, predictability, length, etc.). Let us recall the definition of maxjump: it is the word with the largest difference between the cloze predictability of two consecutive words. Then, in this work we present a first analysis of the energy of the wavelet coefficients of microsaccades during reading proverbs and low predictability sentences on words before maxjump, during maxjump and words after maxjump. The idea of this approach is to try to characterize its behavior along each one of those set of words in order to have another tool for evaluating microsaccades during reading sentences with different contextual predictability since this might provide information about specific effect of cue attention on complex task.
Publicado en: Mecánica Computacional vol. XXXV, no. 43
Facultad de Ingeniería
Materia
Ingeniería
Eye-movements
Microsaccades
Reading
Continuous wavelet transform
Nivel de accesibilidad
acceso abierto
Condiciones de uso
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
Repositorio
SEDICI (UNLP)
Institución
Universidad Nacional de La Plata
OAI Identificador
oai:sedici.unlp.edu.ar:10915/105818

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spelling An approach to the study of microsaccades during reading using waveletsArriola, Juan M.Álvarez, Marcela P.Castro, Liliana RaquelAgamennoni, Osvaldo EnriqueFernández, GerardoIngenieríaEye-movementsMicrosaccadesReadingContinuous wavelet transformReading requires the integration of several central cognitive subsystems from attention and oculomotor control to word identification and language comprehension. When reading, the eyes alternate between long movements and relative stillness, that are called saccadic movements and fixations, respectively. The average fixation lasts for 150 to 250 ms and it is composed by three movements called microsaccades (or microsaccadic movements), tremor and drift. Drift and tremor are slow movements with small amplitude; microsaccades represent a ballistic component of fixational eye movements. Then, microsaccades are characterized as roughly linear movement epochs with durations up to 30ms and a frequency of one to two per second in fixations not related with reading. There are just a few works analyzing microsaccades while subjects are processing complex information and fewer when doing predictions about upcoming events. In all of them there is evidence that microsaccades are sensitive to changes of perceptual inputs as well as modulations of cognitive states. Changes in perceptual inputs are related to the type of sentences (low/high predictability, proverbs) and the characteristics of the words in the sentence (frequency, predictability, length, etc.). Let us recall the definition of maxjump: it is the word with the largest difference between the cloze predictability of two consecutive words. Then, in this work we present a first analysis of the energy of the wavelet coefficients of microsaccades during reading proverbs and low predictability sentences on words before maxjump, during maxjump and words after maxjump. The idea of this approach is to try to characterize its behavior along each one of those set of words in order to have another tool for evaluating microsaccades during reading sentences with different contextual predictability since this might provide information about specific effect of cue attention on complex task.Publicado en: <i>Mecánica Computacional</i> vol. XXXV, no. 43Facultad de Ingeniería2017-11info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObjectinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionObjeto de conferenciahttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_5794info:ar-repo/semantics/documentoDeConferenciaapplication/pdf2511-2520http://sedici.unlp.edu.ar/handle/10915/105818enginfo:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/url/https://cimec.org.ar/ojs/index.php/mc/article/view/5465info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/issn/2591-3522info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccesshttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)reponame:SEDICI (UNLP)instname:Universidad Nacional de La Platainstacron:UNLP2025-11-26T10:01:40Zoai:sedici.unlp.edu.ar:10915/105818Institucionalhttp://sedici.unlp.edu.ar/Universidad públicaNo correspondehttp://sedici.unlp.edu.ar/oai/snrdalira@sedici.unlp.edu.arArgentinaNo correspondeNo correspondeNo correspondeopendoar:13292025-11-26 10:01:40.554SEDICI (UNLP) - Universidad Nacional de La Platafalse
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv An approach to the study of microsaccades during reading using wavelets
title An approach to the study of microsaccades during reading using wavelets
spellingShingle An approach to the study of microsaccades during reading using wavelets
Arriola, Juan M.
Ingeniería
Eye-movements
Microsaccades
Reading
Continuous wavelet transform
title_short An approach to the study of microsaccades during reading using wavelets
title_full An approach to the study of microsaccades during reading using wavelets
title_fullStr An approach to the study of microsaccades during reading using wavelets
title_full_unstemmed An approach to the study of microsaccades during reading using wavelets
title_sort An approach to the study of microsaccades during reading using wavelets
dc.creator.none.fl_str_mv Arriola, Juan M.
Álvarez, Marcela P.
Castro, Liliana Raquel
Agamennoni, Osvaldo Enrique
Fernández, Gerardo
author Arriola, Juan M.
author_facet Arriola, Juan M.
Álvarez, Marcela P.
Castro, Liliana Raquel
Agamennoni, Osvaldo Enrique
Fernández, Gerardo
author_role author
author2 Álvarez, Marcela P.
Castro, Liliana Raquel
Agamennoni, Osvaldo Enrique
Fernández, Gerardo
author2_role author
author
author
author
dc.subject.none.fl_str_mv Ingeniería
Eye-movements
Microsaccades
Reading
Continuous wavelet transform
topic Ingeniería
Eye-movements
Microsaccades
Reading
Continuous wavelet transform
dc.description.none.fl_txt_mv Reading requires the integration of several central cognitive subsystems from attention and oculomotor control to word identification and language comprehension. When reading, the eyes alternate between long movements and relative stillness, that are called saccadic movements and fixations, respectively. The average fixation lasts for 150 to 250 ms and it is composed by three movements called microsaccades (or microsaccadic movements), tremor and drift. Drift and tremor are slow movements with small amplitude; microsaccades represent a ballistic component of fixational eye movements. Then, microsaccades are characterized as roughly linear movement epochs with durations up to 30ms and a frequency of one to two per second in fixations not related with reading. There are just a few works analyzing microsaccades while subjects are processing complex information and fewer when doing predictions about upcoming events. In all of them there is evidence that microsaccades are sensitive to changes of perceptual inputs as well as modulations of cognitive states. Changes in perceptual inputs are related to the type of sentences (low/high predictability, proverbs) and the characteristics of the words in the sentence (frequency, predictability, length, etc.). Let us recall the definition of maxjump: it is the word with the largest difference between the cloze predictability of two consecutive words. Then, in this work we present a first analysis of the energy of the wavelet coefficients of microsaccades during reading proverbs and low predictability sentences on words before maxjump, during maxjump and words after maxjump. The idea of this approach is to try to characterize its behavior along each one of those set of words in order to have another tool for evaluating microsaccades during reading sentences with different contextual predictability since this might provide information about specific effect of cue attention on complex task.
Publicado en: <i>Mecánica Computacional</i> vol. XXXV, no. 43
Facultad de Ingeniería
description Reading requires the integration of several central cognitive subsystems from attention and oculomotor control to word identification and language comprehension. When reading, the eyes alternate between long movements and relative stillness, that are called saccadic movements and fixations, respectively. The average fixation lasts for 150 to 250 ms and it is composed by three movements called microsaccades (or microsaccadic movements), tremor and drift. Drift and tremor are slow movements with small amplitude; microsaccades represent a ballistic component of fixational eye movements. Then, microsaccades are characterized as roughly linear movement epochs with durations up to 30ms and a frequency of one to two per second in fixations not related with reading. There are just a few works analyzing microsaccades while subjects are processing complex information and fewer when doing predictions about upcoming events. In all of them there is evidence that microsaccades are sensitive to changes of perceptual inputs as well as modulations of cognitive states. Changes in perceptual inputs are related to the type of sentences (low/high predictability, proverbs) and the characteristics of the words in the sentence (frequency, predictability, length, etc.). Let us recall the definition of maxjump: it is the word with the largest difference between the cloze predictability of two consecutive words. Then, in this work we present a first analysis of the energy of the wavelet coefficients of microsaccades during reading proverbs and low predictability sentences on words before maxjump, during maxjump and words after maxjump. The idea of this approach is to try to characterize its behavior along each one of those set of words in order to have another tool for evaluating microsaccades during reading sentences with different contextual predictability since this might provide information about specific effect of cue attention on complex task.
publishDate 2017
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2017-11
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