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Recognizing Words and Reading Sentences with Microsecond Flash Displays

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  • Ernest Greene

Abstract

Strings of dots can be used to construct easily identifiable letters, and these in turn can be used to write words and sentences. Prior work found that respondents could identify individual letters when all the dots were simultaneously flashed for an ultra-brief duration. Four of the experiments reported here constructed five-letter words with these dot-letters and a fifth experiment used them to write complete sentences. Respondents were able to recognize individual words that were displayed with a single, simultaneous ultra-brief flash of all the letters. Further, sentences could be efficiently read with a sequence of simultaneous flashes at a frequency that produced perceptual fusion. One experiment determined the frequency range that would produce flicker-fusion. Two experiments established the relation of intensity to probability of recognition with single flashes and with fused-flicker frequencies. Another established the intensities at which flicker-fused and steady displays were judged to be equal in brightness. The final experiment used those flicker-fused and steady intensities to display sentences. The two display conditions were read with equal efficiency, even though the flicker-fused displays provided light stimulation only 0.003% of the time.

Suggested Citation

  • Ernest Greene, 2016. "Recognizing Words and Reading Sentences with Microsecond Flash Displays," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 11(1), pages 1-22, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0145697
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0145697
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Denis G. Pelli & Bart Farell & Deborah C. Moore, 2003. "The remarkable inefficiency of word recognition," Nature, Nature, vol. 423(6941), pages 752-756, June.
    2. Ernest Greene, 2015. "Evaluating Letter Recognition, Flicker Fusion, and the Talbot-Plateau Law using Microsecond-Duration Flashes," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 10(4), pages 1-17, April.
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