Happy Mother's day
Up there the wonderful clouds
Yellow Billed Magpie
Lyre player
10.17 a.m Pacific Time
A Yellow billed Magpie
For latest news bulletins of the park
Permanent make-up
Lilac
A bench
Fence
A flower's jouissance
Practice Social Distancing
Today has been alright
Man
Fence
Behind the fence
After thousands and thousands of stomps
Higher the place...cooler the breeze
Waiting to be picked up
Mighty tree and a Homo sapiens sapiens
If the reed start thinking....
Boudin Breads
Summer Morn
See also...
Keywords
Reading
The amazing efficiency of our reading process only serves to thicken the mystery surrounding its origins. How can our brain be so well adapted to a problem for which it could not possibly have evolved? How can the brain architecture of a strange bipedal primate turned hunter-gatherer have adjusted so perfectly, and in only a few thousand years, to to the challenges of visual word recognition? To clarify this problem, we will now turn to the cerebral circuits for reading. An amazing recent discovery shows that there is a specific cortical area for written words, much like the primary auditory area or the motor cortex that exist in all our brains. Even more surprisingly perhaps, this reading area seems to be identical in readers of English, Japanese, and Italian. Does this mean that there are universal brain mechanisms for reading?
buonacoppi, Karl Hartwig Schütz have particularly liked this photo
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2026
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
X
Sign-in to write a comment.