1. Lateralization of posterior alpha EEG reflects the distribution of spatial attention during saccadic reading
- Author
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Olaf Dimigen, Benthe Kornrumpf, and Werner Sommer
- Subjects
Endocrine and Autonomic Systems ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,General Neuroscience ,05 social sciences ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Fixation (psychology) ,050105 experimental psychology ,Saccadic masking ,Lateralization of brain function ,03 medical and health sciences ,Word lists by frequency ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Rapid serial visual presentation ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Neurology ,Foveal ,Saccade ,Eye tracking ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Biological Psychiatry ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Visuospatial attention is an important mechanism in reading that governs the uptake of information from foveal and parafoveal regions of the visual field. However, the spatiotemporal dynamics of how attention is allocated during eye fixations are not completely understood. The current study explored the use of EEG alpha-band oscillations to investigate the spatial distribution of attention during reading. We reanalyzed two data sets, focusing on the lateralization of alpha activity at posterior scalp sites. In each experiment, participants read short lists of German nouns in two paradigms: either by freely moving their eyes (saccadic reading) or by fixating the screen center while the text moved passively from right to left at the same average speed (RSVP paradigm). In both paradigms, upcoming words were either visible or masked, and foveal processing load was manipulated by varying the words' lexical frequencies. Posterior alpha lateralization revealed a sustained rightward bias of attention during saccadic reading, but not in the RSVP paradigm. Interestingly, alpha lateralization was not influenced by word frequency (foveal load) or preview during the preceding fixation. Hence, alpha did not reflect transient attention shifts within a given fixation. However, in both experiments, we found that in the saccadic reading condition a stronger alpha lateralization shortly before a saccade predicted shorter fixations on the subsequently fixated word. These results indicate that alpha lateralization can serve as a measure of attention deployment and its link to oculomotor behavior in reading.
- Published
- 2017