Letter Visibility and the Optimal Viewing Position Effect of Isolated Connected and Un-Connected Letters in Arabic

The present study provides a further exploration of the role of Arabic letter visibility as a possible cause of the Optimal Viewing Position (OVP) effect. We used isolated connected and un-connected Arabic letters of different shapes (basic, initial, medial, final) placed at the center of fixation (...

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Main Author: Ganayim Deia
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2015-12-01
Series:Psychology of Language and Communication
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/plc-2015-0011
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spelling doaj-db3ab16a0fa14461baac96b3bdfbccef2021-09-05T13:59:47ZengSciendoPsychology of Language and Communication2083-85062015-12-0119317420010.1515/plc-2015-0011plc-2015-0011Letter Visibility and the Optimal Viewing Position Effect of Isolated Connected and Un-Connected Letters in ArabicGanayim Deia0The Arab Center for Mind, Brain & Behavior, SakhninThe present study provides a further exploration of the role of Arabic letter visibility as a possible cause of the Optimal Viewing Position (OVP) effect. We used isolated connected and un-connected Arabic letters of different shapes (basic, initial, medial, final) placed at the center of fixation (Experiment 1) and at various possible positions in isolated presentation (Experiment 2). In order to investigate whether performance in the visual identification task is modulated by letter type, we presented each of the isolated connected and un-connected letter targets in each of the eleven stimulus positions across the array to produce a mean RT (ms) for each of the letter types. Using the initial fixation paradigm enabled us to compare reaction times with correctly identified letter targets appearing in the different possible positions. The findings of the present experiments demonstrated that visual letter recognition is influenced by: (i) the isolated letters’ type (connected, un-connected), as connected letters are easier to recognize than un-connected letters; (ii) isolated letters’ shape (basic, initial, medial, final), as medial and final are harder to recognize than basic and initial letter shapes; (iii) visual field, as reading rates were longer for letter stimuli that were presented in LVF compared to RVF; and (iv) eccentricity, as letter reading rates were correlated with their eccentric placement.https://doi.org/10.1515/plc-2015-0011arabicoptimal viewing positionvisual recognitionconnectedun-connectedisolatedletter
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ganayim Deia
spellingShingle Ganayim Deia
Letter Visibility and the Optimal Viewing Position Effect of Isolated Connected and Un-Connected Letters in Arabic
Psychology of Language and Communication
arabic
optimal viewing position
visual recognition
connected
un-connected
isolated
letter
author_facet Ganayim Deia
author_sort Ganayim Deia
title Letter Visibility and the Optimal Viewing Position Effect of Isolated Connected and Un-Connected Letters in Arabic
title_short Letter Visibility and the Optimal Viewing Position Effect of Isolated Connected and Un-Connected Letters in Arabic
title_full Letter Visibility and the Optimal Viewing Position Effect of Isolated Connected and Un-Connected Letters in Arabic
title_fullStr Letter Visibility and the Optimal Viewing Position Effect of Isolated Connected and Un-Connected Letters in Arabic
title_full_unstemmed Letter Visibility and the Optimal Viewing Position Effect of Isolated Connected and Un-Connected Letters in Arabic
title_sort letter visibility and the optimal viewing position effect of isolated connected and un-connected letters in arabic
publisher Sciendo
series Psychology of Language and Communication
issn 2083-8506
publishDate 2015-12-01
description The present study provides a further exploration of the role of Arabic letter visibility as a possible cause of the Optimal Viewing Position (OVP) effect. We used isolated connected and un-connected Arabic letters of different shapes (basic, initial, medial, final) placed at the center of fixation (Experiment 1) and at various possible positions in isolated presentation (Experiment 2). In order to investigate whether performance in the visual identification task is modulated by letter type, we presented each of the isolated connected and un-connected letter targets in each of the eleven stimulus positions across the array to produce a mean RT (ms) for each of the letter types. Using the initial fixation paradigm enabled us to compare reaction times with correctly identified letter targets appearing in the different possible positions. The findings of the present experiments demonstrated that visual letter recognition is influenced by: (i) the isolated letters’ type (connected, un-connected), as connected letters are easier to recognize than un-connected letters; (ii) isolated letters’ shape (basic, initial, medial, final), as medial and final are harder to recognize than basic and initial letter shapes; (iii) visual field, as reading rates were longer for letter stimuli that were presented in LVF compared to RVF; and (iv) eccentricity, as letter reading rates were correlated with their eccentric placement.
topic arabic
optimal viewing position
visual recognition
connected
un-connected
isolated
letter
url https://doi.org/10.1515/plc-2015-0011
work_keys_str_mv AT ganayimdeia lettervisibilityandtheoptimalviewingpositioneffectofisolatedconnectedandunconnectedlettersinarabic
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