Recent experimental evidence in visual perception analysis shows that eye and finger movements strongly correlate during scene exploration, at both individual and group levels. A familiar context which exploits this synergistic behaviour is when children learn to read, with the practice of finger-pointing to text as a support for their attention focus, directional movement and voice-print match. Using a tablet to display short texts, we collected evidence on the finger-pointing behaviour of 3rd-6th Italian graders engaged in both silent and oral reading. "Finger-tracking" data, sampled by the tablet and aligned with the text, made it possible to time a child's reading paceat word and sentence level. Results are shown to replicate established benchmarks in the reading literature, such as the difference in reading pace between age-matched typical and atypical readers as a function of word frequency and length, and neighbourhood entropy and Old20. Atypical readers show increasing difficulty with longer words, with a steeper time increment for word length > 6, integrating previous evidence. In addition, neighbourhood density plays a sparse facilitative role in atypical reading, with no significant interaction with neighbourhood entropy, pointing to a non trivial developmental interplay between sublexical reading and the richness of the Italian orthographic-phonological lexicon. Despite their different dynamics, optical and tactile strategies for text exploration prove to be highly congruent: this suggests that finger-tracking can be used as an ecological proxy for eye-tracking in reading assessment.

Tracking the pace of reading with finger movements

Pirrelli Vito
;
Cappa Claudia;Ferro Marcello;Marzi Claudia;Nadalini Andrea;Taxitari Loukia
2020

Abstract

Recent experimental evidence in visual perception analysis shows that eye and finger movements strongly correlate during scene exploration, at both individual and group levels. A familiar context which exploits this synergistic behaviour is when children learn to read, with the practice of finger-pointing to text as a support for their attention focus, directional movement and voice-print match. Using a tablet to display short texts, we collected evidence on the finger-pointing behaviour of 3rd-6th Italian graders engaged in both silent and oral reading. "Finger-tracking" data, sampled by the tablet and aligned with the text, made it possible to time a child's reading paceat word and sentence level. Results are shown to replicate established benchmarks in the reading literature, such as the difference in reading pace between age-matched typical and atypical readers as a function of word frequency and length, and neighbourhood entropy and Old20. Atypical readers show increasing difficulty with longer words, with a steeper time increment for word length > 6, integrating previous evidence. In addition, neighbourhood density plays a sparse facilitative role in atypical reading, with no significant interaction with neighbourhood entropy, pointing to a non trivial developmental interplay between sublexical reading and the richness of the Italian orthographic-phonological lexicon. Despite their different dynamics, optical and tactile strategies for text exploration prove to be highly congruent: this suggests that finger-tracking can be used as an ecological proxy for eye-tracking in reading assessment.
Campo DC Valore Lingua
dc.authority.orgunit Istituto di Fisiologia Clinica - IFC en
dc.authority.orgunit Istituto di linguistica computazionale "Antonio Zampolli" - ILC en
dc.authority.people Pirrelli Vito en
dc.authority.people Cappa Claudia en
dc.authority.people Crepaldi Davide en
dc.authority.people Del Pinto Viola en
dc.authority.people Ferro Marcello en
dc.authority.people Giulivi Sara en
dc.authority.people Marzi Claudia en
dc.authority.people Nadalini Andrea en
dc.authority.people Taxitari Loukia en
dc.collection.id.s 69aaa6b3-f0f0-47c1-b9a1-040bae867ec3 *
dc.collection.name 04.02 Abstract in Atti di convegno *
dc.contributor.appartenenza Istituto di Fisiologia Clinica - IFC *
dc.contributor.appartenenza Istituto di linguistica computazionale "Antonio Zampolli" - ILC *
dc.contributor.appartenenza.mi 885 *
dc.contributor.appartenenza.mi 918 *
dc.date.accessioned 2024/02/19 17:21:29 -
dc.date.available 2024/02/19 17:21:29 -
dc.date.firstsubmission 2024/09/26 19:08:00 *
dc.date.issued 2020 -
dc.date.submission 2024/09/26 19:08:00 *
dc.description.abstracteng Recent experimental evidence in visual perception analysis shows that eye and finger movements strongly correlate during scene exploration, at both individual and group levels. A familiar context which exploits this synergistic behaviour is when children learn to read, with the practice of finger-pointing to text as a support for their attention focus, directional movement and voice-print match. Using a tablet to display short texts, we collected evidence on the finger-pointing behaviour of 3rd-6th Italian graders engaged in both silent and oral reading. "Finger-tracking" data, sampled by the tablet and aligned with the text, made it possible to time a child's reading paceat word and sentence level. Results are shown to replicate established benchmarks in the reading literature, such as the difference in reading pace between age-matched typical and atypical readers as a function of word frequency and length, and neighbourhood entropy and Old20. Atypical readers show increasing difficulty with longer words, with a steeper time increment for word length > 6, integrating previous evidence. In addition, neighbourhood density plays a sparse facilitative role in atypical reading, with no significant interaction with neighbourhood entropy, pointing to a non trivial developmental interplay between sublexical reading and the richness of the Italian orthographic-phonological lexicon. Despite their different dynamics, optical and tactile strategies for text exploration prove to be highly congruent: this suggests that finger-tracking can be used as an ecological proxy for eye-tracking in reading assessment. -
dc.description.affiliations Institute for Computational Linguistics, CNR Italy; Institute of Clinical Physiology, CNR Italy; SISSA, Trieste; SISSA, Trieste; Institute for Computational Linguistics, CNR Italy; University of Applied Sciences and Arts of Southern Switzerland ; Institute for Computational Linguistics, CNR Italy;Institute for Computational Linguistics, CNR Italy;Institute for Computational Linguistics, CNR Italy; -
dc.description.allpeople Pirrelli, Vito; Cappa, Claudia; Crepaldi, Davide; Del Pinto, Viola; Ferro, Marcello; Giulivi, Sara; Marzi, Claudia; Nadalini, Andrea; Taxitari, Loukia -
dc.description.allpeopleoriginal Pirrelli, Vito; Cappa, Claudia; Crepaldi, Davide; Del Pinto, Viola; Ferro, Marcello; Giulivi, Sara; Marzi, Claudia; Nadalini, Andrea; Taxitari, Loukia en
dc.description.fulltext open en
dc.description.numberofauthors 9 -
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/427657 -
dc.identifier.url https://osf.io/hr62g/ en
dc.language.iso eng en
dc.miur.last.status.update 2024-12-18T15:02:21Z *
dc.relation.conferencedate 16-18/10/2020 en
dc.relation.conferencename Words in the World International Conference en
dc.relation.conferenceplace Montreal (Canada) en
dc.relation.ispartofbook Words in the World book of abstracts en
dc.relation.medium ELETTRONICO en
dc.relation.numberofpages 1 en
dc.subject.keywordseng Reading -
dc.subject.keywordseng Finger tracking -
dc.subject.keywordseng Mental Lexicon -
dc.subject.keywordseng Word frequency -
dc.subject.keywordseng Word Length -
dc.subject.keywordseng Neighbourhood entropy -
dc.subject.singlekeyword Reading *
dc.subject.singlekeyword Finger tracking *
dc.subject.singlekeyword Mental Lexicon *
dc.subject.singlekeyword Word frequency *
dc.subject.singlekeyword Word Length *
dc.subject.singlekeyword Neighbourhood entropy *
dc.title Tracking the pace of reading with finger movements en
dc.type.driver info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject -
dc.type.full 04 Contributo in convegno::04.02 Abstract in Atti di convegno it
dc.type.miur 274 -
dc.type.referee Esperti anonimi en
dc.ugov.descaux1 442758 -
iris.mediafilter.data 2025/04/15 04:38:01 *
iris.orcid.lastModifiedDate 2024/11/29 18:49:37 *
iris.orcid.lastModifiedMillisecond 1732902577081 *
iris.sitodocente.maxattempts 1 -
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