ABSTRACT

Published in 1984, this volume presents methodologies for studying the ongoing psychological processes that occur as a person reads a text, as well as discussing the major findings that these methodologies have produced, to provide a handbook of reading comprehension research techniques.

Focusing on the comprehension processes that occur when a person is reading, rather than the representation that remains after the text has been read, the methodologies use measures such as reading times that reflect ongoing processes, rather than relying exclusively on conventional measures of memory performance such as recall. These methods make use of computer technology for rapid and flexible stimulus representation and data acquisition.

This book will allow researchers and students to select appropriate methodologies to investigate a range of fascinating questions about reading comprehension.

chapter 1|10 pages

The Influence of Methodologies on Psycholinguistic Research

A Regression to the Whorfian Hypothesis 1

chapter 3|38 pages

The Word-by-Word Reading Paradigm

An Experimental and Theoretical Approach 1

chapter 5|28 pages

Rapid Serial Visual Presentation (RSVP)

A Method for Studying Language Processing