Abstract
AbstractWhile humans have a remarkable ability to read and comprehend text, the neuronal mechanisms supporting natural reading remain elusive. It is debated whether upcoming words in the parafovea are processed semantically. Here we show that the brain can indeed detect that a word is contextually implausible even before fixating on it. We demonstrated this by imperceivably flickering target words at 60 Hz that either were congruent or incongruent with the sentence context. While participants read these sentences, we used MEG to detect the flicker-response prior to saccades to the target words. We found a smaller tagging response for words that were incongruent with the sentence context; this reduction was related to the individual reading speed. We conclude that parafoveal semantic integration occurs during natural reading.One Sentence SummaryDuring natural reading, upcoming words are previewed and integrated into the context even before we move our eyes to it.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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1. Eye Tracking in MEG;Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics;2024-01-30