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Home > ACTUALLY, ONLINE SKIMMING PROBABLY HASN'T AFFECTED SERIOUS READING AFTER ALL

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ACTUALLY, ONLINE SKIMMING PROBABLY HASN'T AFFECTED SERIOUS READING AFTER ALL

[4.21.14]

A popular Washington Post article by my colleague Michael S. Rosenwald said that researchers were finding that the habit of scanning and skinning material online was changing the human brain and hindering people’s” ability to read long, complex and dense material. Cognitive scientist Daniel Willingham, a professor at the University of Virginia, is highly skeptical. ...

… "The truth is, probably, that the brain is simply not adaptable enough for such a radical change. Yes, the brain changes as a consequence of experience, but there are likely limits to this change, a point made by both Steve Pinker and Roger Schank when commenting on this issue. If our ability to deploy attention or to comprehend language processes were to undergo substantial change, the consequences would cascade through the entire cognitive system, and so the brain is probably too conservative for large-scale change."

Pinker and Schank were among a group of people who responded in 2010 to Edge.org’s question: How is the Internet changing the way you think? Pinker, a renowned experimental psychologist and cognitive scientist at Harvard University, gave this answer: Not at all. He wrote in part: …

ACTUALLY, ONLINE SKIMMING PROBABLY HASN'T AFFECTED SERIOUS READING AFTER ALL [1]

Related Content: 

HOW IS THE INTERNET CHANGING THE WAY YOU THINK? [2]

News From: 

Washington Post [3]
Valerie Strauss
Read the full article → [4]
[ Mon. Apr. 21. 2014 ]

A popular Washington Post article by my colleague Michael S. Rosenwald said that researchers were finding that the habit of scanning and skinning material online was changing the human brain and hindering people’s” ability to read long, complex and dense material. Cognitive scientist Daniel Willingham, a professor at the University of Virginia, is highly skeptical. ...

… "The truth is, probably, that the brain is simply not adaptable enough for such a radical change. Yes, the brain changes as a consequence of experience, but there are likely limits to this change, a point made by both Steve Pinker and Roger Schank when commenting on this issue. If our ability to deploy attention or to comprehend language processes were to undergo substantial change, the consequences would cascade through the entire cognitive system, and so the brain is probably too conservative for large-scale change."

Pinker and Schank were among a group of people who responded in 2010 to Edge.org [5]’s question: How is the Internet changing the way you think? Pinker, a renowned experimental psychologist and cognitive scientist at Harvard University, gave this answer: Not at all. He wrote in part: …

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Links:
[1] https://www.edge.org/news/actually-online-skimming-probably-hasnt-affected-serious-reading-after-all
[2] https://www.edge.org/annual-question/how-is-the-internet-changing-the-way-you-think
[3] http://www.washingtonpost.com/
[4] http://wapo.st/1m0FJ6Z
[5] http://edge.org/