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Process / pipelinePsycholinguistics of reading

Eye-Tracking in Reading

Eye-tracking in reading records where readers look and for how long while they read text naturally, turning the eyes into a continuous index of comprehension. Reading is not a smooth glide but a sequence of brief fixations punctuated by rapid saccades and occasional regressions back to earlier words. By logging this pattern with millisecond precision, researchers derive measures — first-fixation duration, gaze duration, total reading time, regression-path duration, skipping rate — that reveal, region by region and stage by stage, where and how much the language system struggles. Established by Keith Rayner's research program, it is the gold-standard online measure of natural reading.

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Sources

  1. Rayner, K. (1998). Eye movements in reading and information processing: 20 years of research. Psychological Bulletin, 124(3), 372–422. DOI: 10.1037/0033-2909.124.3.372
  2. Rayner, K. (2009). Eye movements and attention in reading, scene perception, and visual search. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 62(8), 1457–1506. DOI: 10.1080/17470210902816461

How to cite this page

ScholarGate. (2026, June 22). Eye-Tracking in Reading Research. ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/en/linguistics/eye-tracking-reading

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ScholarGateEye-Tracking in Reading (Eye-Tracking in Reading Research). Retrieved 2026-06-24 from https://scholargate.app/en/linguistics/eye-tracking-reading · Dataset: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20539026