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Authors

Stephanie Jainta
Leibniz Research Centre for Working Environment and Human Factors  
Wolfgang Jaschinski
Leibniz Research Centre for Working Environment and Human Factors  

Abstract

In our study, 14 subjects read 60 sentences from the Potsdam Sentence Corpus twice (viewing distance: 60 cm), while eye movements were measured with the EyeLink II. We analyzed fixation disparities for complete sentence replications (N=388). After subtracting the average fixation disparity of each sentence from each observation (which gave the “state” fixation disparity), 99% of all remaining fixation disparities were aligned, i.e. smaller than one character width (20 min arc) – depending mostly on incoming saccade amplitude and fixation position. Additionally, we measured the heterophoria for each subject during calibration and found a qualitative relationship between average, individual measures of fixation disparity (“trait” fixation disparity) and heterophoria, after dividing the sample in 3 groups of esophore, exophore and orthophore subjects. We showed that the magnitude of “trait” fixation disparity was biased by the direction of heterophoria: the more eso the heterophoria, the more eso the average sentence fixation disparity. In sum, despite a large “trait” fixation disparity (in the range of -6.6 to +33.6 min arc), “state” fixation disparities within a sentence were on average -0.9 (± 8.7) min arc and, thus, as precise as needed, i.e. within the expected extent of Panum’s area.  

About this article

History

Received: August 13, 2009
Published: February 22, 2010

Citation

Jainta, S. & Jaschinski, W. (2010). “Trait” and “state” aspects of fixation disparity during reading. Journal of Eye Movement Research, 3(3):1, 1-13.

Keywords

binocular coordination

fixation disparity

heterophoria

vergence

reading