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It`s Okay To Be Smart, How Do We Read? It’s Magic (Almost) (2)

How Do We Read? It's Magic (Almost) (2)

And beyond that is an even blurrier zone. No letters being identified here, but importantly

you are sensing how long the next word or two is.

This gives you enough information to decide where your eyes will move next. If the next

word is short and can be skipped, or whether it's long and unfamiliar so you should stop on it.

While you are recognizing the word you are actually looking at and focusing on,

another part of your eye is already reading ahead to tell you what's coming next.

All in all your eyes only stop on about 60% of the words you read. Yet

somehow you still read all of them.

AND YOU HAVE NO IDEA YOU'RE DOING THIS.

So we seem to recognize words not because of their shape, but because of the letters they contain.

Which maybe isn't that surprising,

except we're seeing most of those letters without actually looking at them.

We think the way we recognize words works something like this:

When your eyes land on or near a word, say SOAP,

you see ALL the letters, that is, you process their shapes - basically simultaneously.

You don't scan the letters from left to right one by one,

as if your brain is looking up a word in a dictionary.

You know, the first letter "s" the second letter "o" . . . it doesn't work that way.

Your brain simultaneously compares

each letter position with those in all the words you've seen before.

Think of your mental dictionary as a pool full of words. Every word with one letter

in common gets a little jolt in your brain's neural networks and floats above the rest.

The words with two letters in common get a bigger jolt in your brain and rise above those.

Then the words with three letters in common get an even bigger jolt.

Until finally, the strongest signal in the neural network of your brain's dictionary

rises to the top, and that's the winner: The word you recognize.

This happens over and over as your eyes jump from spot to spot across the page,

taking in different kinds of information from various parts of your eye, unconsciously reading

ahead in your brain, activating countless neural networks, all in less than a quarter of a second.

And then you move your eyes, and do it again, and again, and again. All thanks to some ancient

evolutionary ability you have to recognize certain shapes, curves, and corners.

And the coolest part of all this is the next time you pick up a book,

you won't even think about any of this. You'll just

enjoy a good story. As long as the I's and the O's are the right size at least…

Stay curious.

And as always, a huge thank you to everyone who supports the show on Patreon.

You guys know how Patreon works. Thank you so much for your support.

That is really what helps us make these videos, keep this channel going, support our team, and,

we couldn't do it without you. If you would like to help us do all of this, there is a link

down in the description where you can learn more. And I will see you in the next video.

Hey guys, if you liked this video, then you are going to love the show “Otherwords”

It's over on PBS Storied. You can click the link right up there to check it out. It's a

show all about language and linguistics and the stories inside of that from around the world

that we all take for granted when we're moving our mouth parts and listening to each other.

You know, who among us doesn't enjoy the turn of phrase . . . or . . . a fine tale of etymology?

A bit of vocabulary sprinkled here and there? We love that stuff! So check out “Otherwords”

Learn languages from TV shows, movies, news, articles and more! Try LingQ for FREE

How Do We Read? It’s Magic (Almost) (2) Come si legge? È una magia (quasi) (2) Hoe lezen we? Het is (bijna) magisch (2) Como é que lemos? É mágico (quase) (2) Как мы читаем? Это волшебство (почти) (2)

And beyond that is an even blurrier zone. No  letters being identified here, but importantly ||||||розмитіший||||||||

you are sensing how long the next word or two is.

This gives you enough information to decide  where your eyes will move next. If the next

word is short and can be skipped, or whether it's  long and unfamiliar so you should stop on it.

While you are recognizing the word you  are actually looking at and focusing on,

another part of your eye is already reading  ahead to tell you what's coming next.

All in all your eyes only stop on  about 60% of the words you read. Yet

somehow you still read all of them.

AND YOU HAVE NO IDEA YOU'RE DOING THIS.

So we seem to recognize words not because of their  shape, but because of the letters they contain.

Which maybe isn't that surprising,

except we're seeing most of those  letters without actually looking at them.

We think the way we recognize  words works something like this:

When your eyes land on or near a word, say SOAP,

you see ALL the letters, that is, you process  their shapes - basically simultaneously.

You don't scan the letters  from left to right one by one,

as if your brain is looking  up a word in a dictionary.

You know, the first letter "s" the second  letter "o" . . . it doesn't work that way.

Your brain simultaneously compares |||порівнює

each letter position with those in  all the words you've seen before.

Think of your mental dictionary as a pool  full of words. Every word with one letter

in common gets a little jolt in your brain's  neural networks and floats above the rest. |shared|||||||||||||| |||||поштовх||||||||||

The words with two letters in common get a  bigger jolt in your brain and rise above those. ||||||||||jolt|||||||

Then the words with three letters  in common get an even bigger jolt. ||||||||||||boost

Until finally, the strongest signal in the  neural network of your brain's dictionary

rises to the top, and that's the  winner: The word you recognize.

This happens over and over as your eyes  jump from spot to spot across the page,

taking in different kinds of information from  various parts of your eye, unconsciously reading ||different|||||||||||

ahead in your brain, activating countless neural  networks, all in less than a quarter of a second.

And then you move your eyes, and do it again,  and again, and again. All thanks to some ancient

evolutionary ability you have to recognize  certain shapes, curves, and corners.

And the coolest part of all this is  the next time you pick up a book,

you won't even think about  any of this. You'll just

enjoy a good story. As long as the I's  and the O's are the right size at least… |||||||||||літери O||||||

Stay curious.

And as always, a huge thank you to  everyone who supports the show on Patreon.

You guys know how Patreon works.  Thank you so much for your support.

That is really what helps us make these videos,  keep this channel going, support our team, and,

we couldn't do it without you. If you would  like to help us do all of this, there is a link

down in the description where you can learn  more. And I will see you in the next video.

Hey guys, if you liked this video, then  you are going to love the show “Otherwords” |||||||||||||||Otherwords

It's over on PBS Storied. You can click the  link right up there to check it out. It's a ||||історичний||||||||||||||

show all about language and linguistics and the  stories inside of that from around the world |||||лінгвістика||||||||||

that we all take for granted when we're moving  our mouth parts and listening to each other.

You know, who among us doesn't enjoy the turn of  phrase . . . or . . . a fine tale of etymology? ||||||||||turn of phrase||||||word origins ||||||||||||||||походження слів

A bit of vocabulary sprinkled here and there?  We love that stuff! So check out “Otherwords” ||||sprinked||||||||||| ||||посипаного|||||||||||