Summary information

Study title

The Impact of Hyperlinks, Skim Reading and Perceived Importance when Reading on the Web, 2009-2019

Creator

Fitzsimmons, G, University of Southampton

Study number / PID

855044 (UKDA)

10.5255/UKDA-SN-855044 (DOI)

Data access

Open

Series

Not available

Abstract

It has previously been shown that readers spend a great deal of time skim reading on the Web and that this type of reading can affect comprehension of text. Across two experiments, we examine how hyperlinks influence perceived importance of sentences and how perceived importance in turn affects reading behaviour. In Experiment 1, participants rated the importance of sentences across passages of Wikipedia text, while in Experiment 2, participants read these passages, with the task being either reading for comprehension or skim reading. Reading times of sentences were analysed in relation to the type of task and the importance ratings from Experiment 1. Results from Experiment 1 show readers rated sentences without hyperlinks as being of less importance than sentences that did feature hyperlinks, and this effect is larger when sentences are lower on the page. It was also found that short sentences with more links were rated as more important, but only when they were presented at the top of the page. Long sentences with more links were rated as more important regardless of their position on the page. In Experiment 2, higher importance scores resulted in longer sentence reading times. When skim reading, however, importance ratings had a lesser impact on reading behaviour than when reading for comprehension. We suggest readers are less able to establish the importance of a sentence when skim reading, even though importance could have been assessed by information that would be fairly easy to extract (i.e. presence of hyperlinks, length of sentences, and position on the screen).The centrality of the Web for scientific research and economic activity has not been matched by our understanding of its complex relationship with the embedding society. In part this is because of its Protean nature and ubiquity. It exists at a variety of scales, from engineering protocols to websites, small communities to giant e-government and e-commerce systems. It is engineered technology,...
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Methodology

Data collection period

01/10/2009 - 31/03/2019

Country

United Kingdom

Time dimension

Not available

Analysis unit

Individual

Universe

Not available

Sampling procedure

Not available

Kind of data

Numeric
Other

Data collection mode

Across 2 experiments, we utilised importance and eye tracking methodology to explore how hyperlinks and navigating webpages affect reading behaviour. Experiment One consisted of forty edited Wikipedia articles taken from Fitzsimmons et al. (2019, Experiment Three). One-hundred and sixty target words were embedded in sentences (one target word per sentence) and four sentences were inserted into each Wikipedia article. The rest of the text was edited from Wikipedia articles and all words that were links in the original articles were retained for the experimental text. Participants rated each individual sentence ofr its Importance on a scale of 1-5, which was analysed by number of links in the sentence, position on the page and sentence length. Experiment Two had participants read these sentences while their eye movements were recorded. Eye movements were measured with an SR-Research Eyelink 1000 eye tracker operating at 1000 Hz. Sentence reading times were analysed by their importance ratings from Experiment 1 and whether the reader had been asked to skim read the passages or read them for comprehension.

Funding information

Grant number

EP/G036926/1

Access

Publisher

UK Data Service

Publication year

2021

Terms of data access

The Data Collection is available to any user without the requirement for registration for download/access.

Related publications

Not available