Aging and the optimal viewing position effect in visual word recognition: Evidence from English.
Lin LiSha LiJingxin WangVictoria A McGowanPingping LiuTimothy R JordanKevin B PatersonPublished in: Psychology and aging (2017)
Words are recognized most efficiently by young adults when fixated at an optimal viewing position (OVP), which for English is between a word's beginning and middle letters. How this OVP effect changes with age is unknown but may differ for older adults due to visual declines in later life. Accordingly, a lexical decision experiment was conducted in which short (5-letter) and long (9-letter) words were fixated at various letter positions. The older adults produced slower responses. But, crucially, effects of fixation location for each word-length did not differ substantially across age groups, indicating that OVP effects are preserved in older age. (PsycINFO Database Record