Home » Psychology news » In the brain, one area sees familiar words as pictures, another sounds out words
In the brain, one area sees familiar words as pictures, another sounds out words
June 9, 2016 by NewsBot
Skilled readers can quickly recognize words when they read because the word has been placed in a visual dictionary of sorts which functions separately from an area that processes the sounds of written words, say neuroscientists. The visual dictionary idea rebuts a common theory that our brain needs to "sound out" words each time we see them.