Most beginning readers learn to read one word at a time. They were taught to decode each word individually — phonics, sounding out, word recognition — before moving to the next. This word-by-word habit often persists into adulthood even when the reader is fully fluent.
Skilled adult readers do something different: they process multiple words in each eye fixation. This is called chunking, and it's one of the most well-supported mechanisms behind genuine reading speed differences between readers.
How eye fixations work
Your eyes don't move smoothly across text. They make a series of rapid jumps (saccades) with brief pauses between them (fixations). During each fixation — lasting roughly 200–250 milliseconds — your eyes are still and text is processed.
A fixation covers roughly 1–2 words for a typical reader, or up to 3–4 words for a very skilled reader. Because the number of fixations you make across a page is what determines your pace (each fixation costs roughly the same time), reducing the number of fixations by processing more words per fixation directly increases reading speed.
If you currently make 300 fixations per minute at 1.5 words per fixation, you read at 450 WPM. If you expand to 2.5 words per fixation with the same fixation rate, you read at 750 WPM. The math is simple — though the practice takes time.
What chunking involves
Chunking is training your visual processing to take in larger units of text at each fixation point. Instead of jumping word-by-word, you learn to land between words and process 2–3 words at once.
In practice, this looks like shifting your fixation point to fall on the centre of a 2–3 word cluster:
| Instead of fixating on | Fix at the centre of |
|---|---|
The / quick / brown / fox | The quick / brown fox |
She / said / nothing | She said / nothing |
Your foveal processing — the 2-degree high-acuity zone — is wide enough to take in 2–3 short words simultaneously when they are adjacent. You're not using peripheral vision; you're using the full width of your foveal zone more efficiently.
Practising chunking
Step 1: Identify your current reading span
Read a paragraph while paying attention to how many words you process per fixation. Most untrained readers fixate on single words or even sub-word units. You are likely somewhere between 1 and 2 words per fixation.
Step 2: Physical chunking practice
Take a printed or on-screen text and use a ruler or your finger to mark off groups of 2–3 words. Practise landing your gaze in the centre of each group:
The quick | brown fox | jumped over | the fence
Read each group as a unit rather than individual words. At first this feels awkward — the brain is used to word-by-word processing. With repetition, the chunked perception becomes more natural.
Step 3: Increase chunk size gradually
Start with 2-word chunks for familiar, simple content. Once 2-word chunking feels automatic, move to 3-word chunks. Do not rush this progression — forcing large chunks on unfamiliar content will hurt comprehension.
Step 4: Use line guides
Pointing a pen, pencil, or finger slightly below the line you're reading and moving it at a steady pace can help train chunk-sized saccades. This is the core of hand pacing technique — the physical pacer gives your eyes a rhythm to follow and makes the chunking pattern more consistent.
Step 5: Practice with RSVP calibration
RSVP tools like warpread.app can support chunking training indirectly. By reading at a consistent pace that's slightly faster than comfortable, you force your processing to keep up — and the brain adapts by processing words in larger groups. Setting warpread to 350–400 WPM for familiar content trains the brain to work at a pace that naturally encourages chunking.
What chunking does not do
Chunking is sometimes conflated with peripheral vision reading — the claim that you can read words in your peripheral field and therefore take in whole lines at once. This is different and is not well-supported.
Your peripheral vision lacks the resolution to read letters at normal reading distances. Chunking works because 2–3 short words fit within the foveal zone — the 2-degree central area where resolution is adequate for letter recognition. You're not expanding your reading field; you're using the field you have more efficiently.
Claiming to read 7 words at a glance using peripheral vision is marketing. Training to read 2–3 words per fixation using your foveal zone is real.
Chunking and comprehension
A frequent concern is that chunking reduces comprehension by processing words less carefully. The evidence does not support this concern for fluent adult readers.
Comprehension does not require fixating on every word individually. Skilled readers routinely skip over function words (the, of, in, a) and highly predictable words without comprehension loss. Chunking builds on this natural efficiency.
What does hurt comprehension is chunking at speeds that exceed processing capacity — pushing chunk sizes too large or pacing too fast for the content complexity. Match your chunk size to the difficulty of the material.
Realistic gains
Consistent chunking practice can produce:
- 10–25% speed increase within 4–6 weeks for most readers
- Better consistency — fewer fixation duration spikes on familiar words
- Reduced regression — chunking trains the eye to move forward, reducing the backward-jumping habit
These are modest but real gains. Combined with other techniques (reducing subvocalisation drift, improving focus, reducing unnecessary regression), chunking contributes to a meaningful overall improvement in reading efficiency.
Apply these techniques right now
Paste any text into the RSVP reader to start training at your target WPM — or take the free Speed Reading Fundamentals course for the complete foundation.