I have cross-posted this for those interested in reading and braille. My
thoughts (ignorant ones in relation to the practice of braille, I might
add) are that the fingers may be doing the same as the eyes vis-a-vis
receiving lexico-semantic "chunks", and perhaps scanning ahead while
processing the chunks to build layers of schema. That doesn't answer the
left hand reading from one end of the line and the right hand from the
other. Any thoughts?
Phil
Vrinda Chidambaram wrote:
I recently got a job working as a reader for a blind post-doctorate of
Electrical Engineering.
I was watching him read braille not long ago and noticed that his
hands were sort of all over the page and not moving linearly as I
would have expected. I asked him about it, and he said that the way
people read braille is that they read the right half of the page with
the right hand and read the left half of the page with the left
hand. So with his right hand, he begins in the middle of a line and
moves right. With his left hand, he starts at the beginning of the
same line and continues moving right until he meets the word or group
of words that his right hand encountered first. He reads both halves
of the line simultaneously but processes them separately. I watched
him read some more, and indeed, this is precisely what he does, and he
says that most readers of braille do the same thing and vary only in
the number of fingers they use to read. He was convinced that seeing
people use their eyes in much the same way. I am curious to know what
this could possibly mean about how we process written language. Is the
way that we process written language strictly linear?
Interested,
Vrinda Chidambaram
vrinchidambaram@hotmail.com
:-)-:-(-:-)-:-(-:-)-:-(-:-)-:-(-:-)-:-(-:-)-:
Hofstadter's Law:
It always take longer than you expect,
even when you take into account
Hofstadter's Law.
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