Publication | Closed Access
The Cognitive Effectiveness of Subtitle Processing
216
Citations
43
References
2010
Year
NeurolinguisticsSubtitled FilmCognitionPsycholinguisticsAttentionLanguage LearningSubtitled FilmsCorpus LinguisticsSocial SciencesText RecognitionLanguage AcquisitionLanguage StudiesCognitive ScienceSpeech ProductionSubtitled Film ExcerptSpeech CommunicationLanguage RecognitionSubtitle ProcessingLanguage ComprehensionSpeech PerceptionLinguistics
In an experimental study, we analyzed the cognitive processing of a subtitled film excerpt by adopting a methodological approach based on the integration of a variety of measures: eye-movement data, word recognition, and visual scene recognition. We tested the hypothesis that the processing of subtitled films is cognitively effective: It leads to a good understanding of film content without requiring a significant tradeoff between image processing and text processing. Following indications in the psycholinguistic literature, we also tested the hypothesis that two-line subtitles whose segmentation is syntactically incoherent can have a disruptive effect on information processing and recognition performance. The results highlighted the effectiveness of subtitle processing: Regardless of the quality of line segmentation, participants had a good understanding of the film content, they achieved good levels of performance in both word and scene recognition, and no tradeoff between text and image processing was detected. Eye-movement analyses enabled a further characterization of cognitive processing during subtitled film viewing. This article discusses the theoretical implications of the findings for both subtitling and multiple-source communication and highlights their methodological and applied implications.
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