“…In recent applied studies, researchers have used ET to investigate differences in the reading behaviors of individuals at different stages of reading acquisition, scrutinize relations among component reading skills, examine reading behavior during assessment tasks, and identify instructional/intervention effects with precision (Ashby, Dix, Bontrager, Dey, & Archer, ; Foster, Ardoin, & Binder, ; Joseph, Nation, & Liversedge, ; Valle, Binder, Walsh, Nemier, & Bangs, ; Vorstius, Radach, Mayer, & Lonigan, ). Because of the highly detailed records that it produces, ET has also allowed contemporary reading researchers to scrutinize a multitude of concurrent behaviors and processes underlying reading comprehension (e.g., text and picture integration; Mason, Pluchino, & Tornatora, ). According to eye movement (EM) researchers, such studies have the potential not only to clarify the developmental trajectories of and relations among reading skills but also to inform instructional targets, assessment strategies, and intervention practices (Miller & O'Donnell, ; Rayner et al., ).…”