ORIGINAL RESEARCH article

Front. Psychol.

Sec. Human Developmental Psychology

Visual Guidance Patterns and Comprehension Mechanisms in Children's Nonlinear Picture Book Reading: An Eye-Tracking Study

  • Kookmin University Graduate School, Seongbuk-gu, Republic of Korea

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Abstract

Background: Nonlinear narrative picture books represent an emerging literacy form in children's literature, yet their cognitive processing mechanisms remain understudied. This study investigated visual guidance patterns and comprehension mechanisms in 6-7-year-old children reading nonlinear narrative picture books using eye-tracking technology. Methods: Sixty-four children (72-95 months) read two Chinese nonlinear narrative picture books while their eye movements were recorded using Tobii Pro Spectrum (1200 Hz). Four eye-tracking metrics were analyzed: fixation duration, path consistency index, cross-AOI scanning frequency, and image-first reading proportion. Comprehension was assessed through structured interviews evaluating factual understanding, inference, global coherence, and narrative structure understanding. Results: Children exhibited a predominant "image-first" pattern, with 58.6% of total fixation time on images versus 26.3% on text. However, mean fixation duration was longer for text (348.6 ms) than images (256.2 ms), indicating deeper text processing. Path consistency (r = 0.48, p < 0.001) and cross-AOI scanning (r = 0.45, p < 0.001) positively correlated with age. Eye movement measures explained an additional 26.3% variance in comprehension beyond baseline ability, with cross-AOI scanning as the strongest predictor (β = 0.45, p < 0.001). Cluster analysis identified three reader types: integrative readers achieved highest comprehension (M = 21.8), followed by text-dominant (M = 18.7) and image-dominant readers (M = 16.2). Conclusions: Findings extend text-image integration models to nonlinear contexts, supporting age-adaptive design principles and differentiated reading instruction strategies for children's picture book reading.

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Keywords

Comprehension, eye tracking, Nonlinear narrative, Picture book reading, visual attention

Received

27 November 2025

Accepted

26 December 2025

Copyright

© 2025 Sun, Wang and Chen. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

*Correspondence: Huangjia Chen

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