Uetsuki Miki, Watanabe Junji, Maruya Kazushi
Department of Community Studies, Aoyama Gakuin University, Kanagawa, Japan.
Communication Science Laboratories, Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation, Kanagawa, Japan.
Front Psychol. 2020 Dec 17;11:548619. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.548619. eCollection 2020.
Recently, dynamic text presentation, such as scrolling text, has been widely used. Texts are often presented at constant timing and speed in conventional dynamic text presentation. However, dynamic text presentation enables visually presented texts to indicate timing information, such as prosody, and the texts might influence the impression of reading. In this paper, we examined this possibility by focusing on the temporal features of digital text in which texts are represented sequentially and with varying speed, duration, and timing. We call this "textual prosody." We used three types of textual prosody: "Recorded," "Shuffled," and "Constant." Recorded prosody is the reproduction of a reader's reading with pauses and varying speed that simulates talking. Shuffled prosody randomly shuffles the time course of speed and pauses in the recorded type. Constant prosody has a constant presentation speed and provides no timing information. Experiment 1 examined the effect of textual prosody on people with normal hearing. Participants read dynamic text with textual prosody silently and rated their impressions of texts. The results showed that readers with normal hearing preferred recorded textual prosody and constant prosody at the optimum speed (6 letters/second). Recorded prosody was also preferred at a low presentation speed. Experiment 2 examined the characteristics of textual prosody using an articulatory suppression paradigm. The results showed that some textual prosody was stored in the articulatory loop despite it being presented visually. In Experiment 3, we examined the effect of textual prosody with readers with hearing loss. The results demonstrated that readers with hearing loss had positive impressions at relatively low presentation speeds when the recorded prosody was presented. The results of this study indicate that the temporal structure is processed regardless of whether the input is visual or auditory. Moreover, these results suggest that textual prosody can enrich reading not only in people with normal hearing but also in those with hearing loss, regardless of acoustic experiences.
最近,动态文本呈现,如滚动文本,已被广泛使用。在传统的动态文本呈现中,文本通常以恒定的时间和速度呈现。然而,动态文本呈现使视觉呈现的文本能够指示诸如韵律等时间信息,并且这些文本可能会影响阅读的印象。在本文中,我们通过关注数字文本的时间特征来研究这种可能性,其中文本以不同的速度、持续时间和时间顺序呈现。我们将其称为“文本韵律”。我们使用了三种类型的文本韵律:“录制的”、“随机打乱的”和“恒定的”。录制的韵律是读者带有停顿和变化速度的阅读再现,模拟说话。随机打乱的韵律随机打乱录制类型中速度和停顿的时间进程。恒定的韵律具有恒定的呈现速度,不提供时间信息。实验1研究了文本韵律对听力正常者的影响。参与者默读带有文本韵律的动态文本,并对他们对文本的印象进行评分。结果表明,听力正常的读者在最佳速度(每秒6个字母)下更喜欢录制的文本韵律和恒定的韵律。在低呈现速度下也更喜欢录制的韵律。实验2使用发音抑制范式研究了文本韵律的特征。结果表明,尽管文本韵律是视觉呈现的,但一些文本韵律仍存储在发音环路中。在实验3中,我们研究了文本韵律对听力损失读者的影响。结果表明,当呈现录制的韵律时,听力损失的读者在相对较低的呈现速度下有积极的印象。这项研究的结果表明,无论输入是视觉的还是听觉的,时间结构都会被处理。此外,这些结果表明,文本韵律不仅可以丰富听力正常者的阅读,也可以丰富听力损失者的阅读,而与听觉体验无关。