Meaning-based attentional guidance as a function of foveal and task-related cognitive loads
Fecha
2019Resumen
The depth of parafoveal word processing depends on the amount of cognitive
resources available. Whether this principle applies to the parafoveal semantic processing of
multiple words remains, however, controversial. This study therefore aimed at testing the
impact of the amount of cognitive resources available on the parafoveal semantic processing
of words, by manipulating the foveal and task-related cognitive loads. Participants searched
for words in displays of three semantically related or unrelated words, one of which was
presented in the center of the screen and two within the parafovea. The nature of the task and
the characteristics of the centered word were manipulated to vary respectively the load
associated to the task and to the foveal load. Analyses revealed more first saccades toward the
parafoveal semantic distractors when both loads were low. These results indicate that fast
parafoveal semantic word processing is constrained by the availability of cognitive resources.