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READING FROM BEHIND THE EYES

READING FROM BEHIND THE EYES. VISUAL AND NONVISUAL INFORMATION. What’s missing??? Visual or Nonvisual Information???.

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READING FROM BEHIND THE EYES

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  1. READING FROM BEHIND THE EYES VISUAL AND NONVISUAL INFORMATION

  2. What’s missing??? Visual or Nonvisual Information??? Datfinnsingetuniktilasningen, vare sign man ser pa hijarnansstrukturellerdessfunktioner. Den medicinskavetenskapenharintelokaliseratnagotspecifikt “lascentrum” ijharnan.

  3. How’s your comprehension?? Effects of differential vertical diffusivities for T and S on the time-dependent models of the thermohaline circulation

  4. Since written English is often highly redundant, much of the material can be omitted without any loss of meaning; a large proportion of information in a text can be absorbed using peripheral vision and nonvisualinformaton. Words that are highly likely to occur in a given context do not have to be checked by looking directly at them - peripheral vision can check that they are what is expected even while the eye is fixating elsewhere. When you read the message below are you using more visual or nonvisual information? What you see or what you expect to see? 7H15 M3554G3 53RV35 7O PR0V3 H0W 0UR M1ND5 C4N D0 4M4Z1NG 7H1NG5! 1MPR3551V3 7H1NG5! 1N 7H3 B3G1NN1NG 17 WA5 H4RD BU7 N0W, 0N 7H15 LIN3 Y0UR M1ND 1S R34D1NG 17 4U70M471C4LLY W17H 0U7 3V3N 7H1NK1NG 4B0U7 17, B3 PROUD! 0NLY C3R741N P30PL3 C4N R3AD 7H15. PL3453 F0RW4RD 1F U C4N R34D 7H15. 

  5. RECIPROCAL RELATIONSHIP The more nonvisual information you have when you read, the less visual information you need. The less nonvisual information you have when you read, the more visual information you need.

  6. LIMITED CAPACITY

  7. THE HUMAN BRAIN EXAMPLES OF EYE / BRAIN SURPRISES AND ILLUSIONS

  8. VISUAL PERCEPTION THE BRAIN AS DECISION MAKER 2IO LION STREET

  9. DEMONSTRATION OF THE LIMITATIONS OF VISUAL INFORMATIONORTHE VALUE OF NONVISUAL INFORMATION

  10. JLHYLPAJMRWKHMYOEZSXPSELM

  11. RANDOM LIMITATIONS • There is a limit to how much can be seen at any one time, and that limit in terms of random letters is four or five. • There is a limit to the rate at which the brain can identify random letters in reading, and that rate is four or five letters per second.

  12. SNEEZE FURY HORSES WHEN AGAIN

  13. WORDS • When letters are organized into words readers can generally identify the equivalent of ten or a dozen letters or more. • The amount of visual information required to identify a single letter is cut by half if the letter occurs in a word. • You don’t read each letter individually. Your brain processes them as words.

  14. EARLY FROSTS HARM THE CROPS

  15. NONVISUAL INFORMATION FROM SENSE • One glance at a meaningful sentence of English words allows you to see everything – all 25 letters – four or five words instead of four or five letters. • The amount of visual information available to the brain in each demonstration was the same, but with a sequence of words that make sense you can read much more in the same amount of time.

  16. MAXIMIZE VISUAL AND NONVISUAL INFORMATION EXPAND FIXATIONS

  17. In the barnentertainment Pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosos The contract was signed under duress.

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