“…These effects can be observed in the visual modality with smaller fonts (Rhodes & Castel, 2008;Undorf & Zimdahl, 2019;Yang et al, 2018), hard-to-read cursive writing (Geller et al, 2018;Undorf et al, 2017), blurred (Rosner et al, 2015;Yue et al, 2013) or masked words , words with unprimed letters (Fiacconi et al, 2020) and partially deleted object pictures (Besken, 2016). In the auditory modality, a similar effect is found for quiet words (Frank & Kuhlmann, 2017;Rhodes & Castel, 2009), words that are inter-spliced with silences (Besken & Mullligan, 2014;Susser et al, 2013), or words whose signal-to-noise ratio are decreased (Tatz et al, 2021). Even though this effect has been shown repeatedly with single-word materials, the effects of perceptual disfluencies on naturalistic, multi-modal materials remain less clear.…”