Are Eye Movements and EEG on the Same Page?: A Coregistration Study on Parafoveal Preview and Lexical Frequency.
Date
2023Abstract
Readers extract visual and linguistic information not only from fixated words but also
upcoming parafoveal words to introduce new input efficiently into the language processing
pipeline. The lexical frequency of upcoming words and similarity with subsequent foveal
information both influence the amount of time people spend once they fixate the word foveally.
However, it is unclear from eye movements alone the extent to which parafoveal word
processing, and the integration of that word with foveally obtained information, continues after
saccade plans have been initiated. To investigate the underlying neural processes involved in
word recognition after saccade planning, we coregistered EEG and eye movements during a
gaze-contingent display change paradigm. We orthogonally manipulated the frequency of the
parafoveal and foveal words and measured fixation related potentials (FRPs) upon foveal
fixation. Eye movements showed primarily an effect of preview frequency, suggesting that
saccade planning is based on the familiarity of the parafoveal input. FRPs, on the other hand,
demonstrated a disruption in downstream processing when parafoveal and foveal input differed,
but only when the parafoveal word was high frequency. These findings demonstrate that lexical
processing continues after the eyes have moved away from a word and that eye movements and
FRPs provide distinct but complementary accounts about oculomotor behavior and neural
processing that cannot be obtained from either method in isolation. Furthermore, these findings
put constraints on models of reading by suggesting that lexical processes that occur before an eye
movement program is initiated are qualitatively different from those that occur afterward.