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The Changing Reading Brain of the
21st Century: The Importance of “Knowing what
 we do not Know” for the Future of How We Think
The Importance of “Knowing what we do not Know”
Center for Reading
              and Language Research
• Maryanne Wolf, Director       • Mirit Barzillai, Semantics, Global
• Stephanie Gottwald, Asst.       Literacy, Technology
  Director, Linguistics, Teacher • Elizabeth Norton, Brain Imaging
  Training
                                   in Early Predictors of Dyslexia
• Yashira Perez, Genes,
  Dyslexia, African-American & • Kate Ullman, African-American
  Latino children                  Dialect and Reading
• Cathy Moritz, Music and
                                 • Surina Basho, Memory and
  Reading
                                   Dyslexia Subtypes
• Yvonne Gill (Arizona) and
  Lynne Miller, Curriculum       • Melissa Orkin, Affective
  Development for RAVE-O           Development and Dyslexia
  Basic and Plus
I am deeply indebted to...
  Heidi Bally
  Cinthia Coletti Haan
  Ulrike Kesper-Grossman and Paul Grossman
  Rossella and Aurelio Maria Mottola
Great transitions in
 Communication



            1
       Non- language to
        Oral Language




                            2
                       Oral Language to
                       Written Language



       3
  Written Language
          to
   Digital Culture
Three Questions of Kant   (Dunne,
              2012)

  What can we know?
    What should we do?

    What may we hope?
1. Can what we know about the
                 evolution of the reading brain
                    inform the future, digital culture?

                   2. Can what we know about the
 What can we     reading brain illumine what we do not
  Know from     know about how reading and thought will
                  develop in the next generation ?
Neurosciences
      ?          3. Can knowledge about the “reading
                brain”, combined with multiple ways
                of knowing ---exemplified by Socrates,
                Proust, and Nicholas of Cusa--- propel a
                more hopeful approach to our transition?
1. Can what we know about the evolution of the
 reading brain inform the future, digital culture ?
An Approach to the Study of Reading
   from Cognitive Neurosciences
   from Cognitive Neurosciences
The human brain was never born to read.

How did the human brain learn to read with
no genetic program or specific reading
                  center?
Dehaene, 2009



“Neuronal Recycling” for Literacy
Principles of Brain Design
      Underpinning Cultural Inventions

•   Ability to form new
    connected circuits
•   Capacity for “working
    groups” of neurons to
    specialize (pattern
    recognition)
•   Capacity for              Two Pyramidals,Greg Dunn


    automatization
“Neuronal Niche” (Dehaene,2009)
For First Logographic Symbols




                            Y
Evidence for Neuronal Recycling and Possibly Proto-letters



   Dehaene’s Studies of
Numeracy in Primates

 Studies of Baboons and
   Orthographic Learning
                        Grainger et al.



    New Studies of Non-
   Literate Children in
 Ethiopia-Tufts and MIT Media Lab
Earlier Tablets: Sumerian

               Earliest
               emphases on
               phonology,
               orthography,
               semantics,
               syntax, and
               morphology
                     (Cohen, 2000)
Greek Writing and the
 Alphabetic Principle

           The insight that words
           are made up of
           sounds and each
           sound can be signified
           by a symbol .
Multiple Circuits of Reading Brain

English
                              Brain can
                          rearrange itself
                             in multiple
Chinese                    ways to read,
& Kanji                    depending on
                           writing system
Japanese                    and medium.
                           Bulger, Perfetti, & Schneider
  Kana
How does the Young Brain
         Learn to Read?
 Each new reader must
create a new reading
  circuit from older
  cognitive and
    linguistic
structures and their
     connections
Martinos MIT
Imaging Center
Early Reading Brain:
Everything Matters in the Development of the
              Reading Circuit
P honemes
                O rthographic
                Patterns

                S emantics
                S yntax
                M orphology


Particularly, Language
     Development
Expert Deep Reading” Brain on
           Proust
The Heart of
       Expert Reading
       Expert Reading
At the heart of
reading,100 to 200
milliseconds allow us
“time to think
new thoughts”.
“We feel quite truly that
  our wisdom begins with
  that of the author…By a
  law which perhaps
  signifies that we can
  receive the truth from
  nobody, that which is the
  end of their wisdom
  appears to us as but the
  beginning of ours.”
“Nous sentons Marcel Proust
 tres bien que
 notre sagesse
 commence ou
celle de l’auteur
     finit... “
“Deep Reading”


“Slower”,
concentrated
cognitive processes
encouraged in
present
expert reading
brain
Inference
Analogical
Thinking
Critical Analysis
and Deliberation
Insight and
Epiphany
Contemplation


Going beyond the
wisdom of the author
2. Can what we know about the Reading Brain
illumine what we do not know about how reading
   and thought will develop in a digital culture ?
What are the deeper implications of having a
plastic reading circuit as we move to a
   digitally dominated set of mediums ?
How do we think on-line?
“The scariest thing about Stanley Kubrick’s vision
 wasn’t that computers started to act like people
 but that people had started to act like computers.
 We’re beginning to process information as if we’re
 nodes; it’s all about the speed of locating and
 reading data.
We’re transferring our intelligence into the machine,
 and the machine is transferring its way of thinking
 into us.”
                                 Nick Carr in “Do you trust Google?”,
                                                   WIRED, Jan. 2008
Cognitive
                             characteristics of
                              on-line reading
                                in the digital
                               reading brain



Continuous partial attention; less sustained
            attention and focus
“Set” for immediacy and speed of processing
Faster multi-tasking of large sets of information
                        37
Differences in Attention: “Skimming is the new
normal”
Scanning, browsing, bouncing, keyword spotting (Liu,
2005, 2009)

Less time on in-depth, concentrated reading
Psychological reflex to “click” and move “set”
Decreased sustained attention
More attention to
visual, external imagery

Less emphases on
touch and materiality
Less internalization of
knowledge, and more
dependence on external
sources
Cognitive Effects of Multi-tasking:
      Brain Imaging Studies
      Brain Imaging Studies

“Even if we can learn while distracted,
it changes how you learn, making
the learning less efficient and useful”
                              “Multitasking hinders learning”
                                      Russ Poldrack (2006)
              Proceedings from National Academy of Science
Touch and Materiality Factors:
    Kinesthesia and Synesthesia Emphases in
                 Screen and Print




“Near impossibility of getting immersed in
 hypertext in same way as getting lost in a book”
                                      (Mangen, 2009)
Comprehension for On-Screen vs. Print


Screen




 Print




                          (Ackerman & Lauterman, 2012)
The Formation of Deep ReadingHow
  does deep reading come to be?
Cautions From the Last Transition


              Socrates feared that print
              would give the illusion of
              truth and create no ambition
              in the young beyond the
              superfluity of
              knowledge .
Is superfluity (“shallow reading”)
and the expectation for constant,
immediate external information be
the new threat for digital readers?
 Will these emphases short-circuit
         the reading brain?
Will the process of internalization of knowledge
require too much time and cognitive effort given immediate
access to external knowledge

Will imagination in childhood be displaced by too much
that is given too quickly requiring too little
effort ?
Will the development of imagery in the child be
displaced by visual imagery that is provided
We can not go back to a
pre-digital time; but, we
should not lurch forward
 without understanding
 what we will lose ,
what we will gain , for
 our species’ cognitive
       repertoire.
“It would be a shame if brilliant technology
   were to end up threatening the kind of
         intellect that produced it.”
                                - Edward Tenner
Three Questions of Kant   (Dunne,
             2012)


    What can we know?

 What should we do?
   What may we hope ?
3. Can knowledge about the “reading brain”, combined with
     multiple ways of knowing ---exemplified by
Socrates/Aristotle, Proust, and Nicholas of Cusa--- propel a
         more hopeful approach to our transition?
How do we prevent “Short
circuiting” of deep reading brain
    while acquiring new skills
     necessary for the 21st
             Century?
“A culture can be judged by how it
   pursues three lives: the life of
activity and productivity, the life of
        enjoyment, the life of
          contemplation.”
                             -Aristotle
➡    Massive information
                       processing with more
                       non-linear branching
                       and iconic emphases

 Advantages of
 Digital Reading ➡     Speed and efficiency
Brain for the Life
                   ➡   Multi-tasking and
  of Activity and      interactive communication
     Productivity
                  ➡    Democratization of
                       knowledge
One of the greatest
  impediments to this
 form of reading is the
  “busy mind” that
skips from one thought
to the next without the
  capacity to enter the
hidden depths of words
    that require both
 receptivity and the
quiet focusing of
   attention.
        -Enzo Bianchi
Advantages of Deep
Reading Brain for the
         “Life of
Contemplation”The time
required by deep reading
 both in milliseconds
 during the reading act


and in years of formation
  changes the quality of
         thought.
“We transgress not
because we try to build
 the new, but because
    we do not allow
 ourselves to consider
   what it disrupts or
      diminishes”
       -Sherry Turkle, Alone
                   Together
How do we resolve a “coincidence of opposites of
             believable truths”?
                                  -Nicholas of Cusa
“learn-ed ignorance”A kind of     knowing that is
             aware of its own limits:
                 what we know
             what we do not know
and what we need to know to understand and move
                     forward.
         to understand and move forward.
What we know...
We know...




... our brain was never genetically programmed to read.
We know...




    ... each reader must build a new reading circuit.
We know...




... this reading circuit is plastic and influenced by the
 specific emphases of different writing systems and
                          mediums
We know...




... that the present reading brain is capable of both
    the most superficial and the deepest forms of
             reading, feeling, and thought
What we do not know...
We do not know...




... but we can predict that information will accelerate at
rates that will make completely new demands on every
             person in the next generation.
                                  Courtesy of Ray Kurzweil and Kurzweil Technologies, Inc.
We do not know...




...if immediate access to massive amounts of information
    will change the nature of internal processing during
         reading--- its deeper comprehension and the
    internalization of knowledge for future thoughts and
              insights beyond information given.
We do not know...




... if the immediate access to this increasing amount of
   external information in the young will deter from the
 formation of “Deep Reading” processes or the
  desire to probe more deeply into its meaning or to go
                         beyond it.
We do not know...




... if such changes in internalized knowledge will result in
a very different set of cognitive capacities to synthesize,
infer from information, and go beyond it in very different,
and more innovative ways than before, more appropriate
                  for the digital culture.
Three Questions of Kant   (Dunne,
             2012)


    What can we know?

   What should we do?

 What may we hope ?
“I think there’s a
common point between
 both worlds, and then
 there’s also a point of
 departure where they
each demonstrate their
        own sort of
      possibilities.”
           -Mark Danielewski
QuickTime™ et un
              décompresseur
sont requis pour visionner cette image.
How do we add to the
                       repertoire of the expert
“Knowing what we       reading brain without
do not Know”           diminishing its present
                       capacities?
as the basis for our
Questions            How can the digital medium
                     be designed to redress its
                       own shortcomings?
How can we create the conditions for new readers to
develop a bi-literate brain and to know when
to skim and when to dive deeply?
A lecture about how the brain learns to leap
beyond the information given shouldn’t have
               a last slide.....

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Marianne Wolf

  • 1. The Changing Reading Brain of the 21st Century: The Importance of “Knowing what we do not Know” for the Future of How We Think The Importance of “Knowing what we do not Know”
  • 2. Center for Reading and Language Research • Maryanne Wolf, Director • Mirit Barzillai, Semantics, Global • Stephanie Gottwald, Asst. Literacy, Technology Director, Linguistics, Teacher • Elizabeth Norton, Brain Imaging Training in Early Predictors of Dyslexia • Yashira Perez, Genes, Dyslexia, African-American & • Kate Ullman, African-American Latino children Dialect and Reading • Cathy Moritz, Music and • Surina Basho, Memory and Reading Dyslexia Subtypes • Yvonne Gill (Arizona) and Lynne Miller, Curriculum • Melissa Orkin, Affective Development for RAVE-O Development and Dyslexia Basic and Plus
  • 3. I am deeply indebted to... Heidi Bally Cinthia Coletti Haan Ulrike Kesper-Grossman and Paul Grossman Rossella and Aurelio Maria Mottola
  • 4. Great transitions in Communication 1 Non- language to Oral Language 2 Oral Language to Written Language 3 Written Language to Digital Culture
  • 5. Three Questions of Kant (Dunne, 2012) What can we know? What should we do? What may we hope?
  • 6. 1. Can what we know about the evolution of the reading brain inform the future, digital culture? 2. Can what we know about the What can we reading brain illumine what we do not Know from know about how reading and thought will develop in the next generation ? Neurosciences ? 3. Can knowledge about the “reading brain”, combined with multiple ways of knowing ---exemplified by Socrates, Proust, and Nicholas of Cusa--- propel a more hopeful approach to our transition?
  • 7. 1. Can what we know about the evolution of the reading brain inform the future, digital culture ?
  • 8. An Approach to the Study of Reading from Cognitive Neurosciences from Cognitive Neurosciences
  • 9. The human brain was never born to read. How did the human brain learn to read with no genetic program or specific reading center?
  • 11. Principles of Brain Design Underpinning Cultural Inventions • Ability to form new connected circuits • Capacity for “working groups” of neurons to specialize (pattern recognition) • Capacity for Two Pyramidals,Greg Dunn automatization
  • 12. “Neuronal Niche” (Dehaene,2009) For First Logographic Symbols Y
  • 13. Evidence for Neuronal Recycling and Possibly Proto-letters Dehaene’s Studies of Numeracy in Primates Studies of Baboons and Orthographic Learning Grainger et al. New Studies of Non- Literate Children in Ethiopia-Tufts and MIT Media Lab
  • 14.
  • 15.
  • 16. Earlier Tablets: Sumerian Earliest emphases on phonology, orthography, semantics, syntax, and morphology (Cohen, 2000)
  • 17. Greek Writing and the Alphabetic Principle The insight that words are made up of sounds and each sound can be signified by a symbol .
  • 18. Multiple Circuits of Reading Brain English Brain can rearrange itself in multiple Chinese ways to read, & Kanji depending on writing system Japanese and medium. Bulger, Perfetti, & Schneider Kana
  • 19. How does the Young Brain Learn to Read? Each new reader must create a new reading circuit from older cognitive and linguistic structures and their connections
  • 21. Early Reading Brain: Everything Matters in the Development of the Reading Circuit
  • 22. P honemes O rthographic Patterns S emantics S yntax M orphology Particularly, Language Development
  • 23.
  • 24. Expert Deep Reading” Brain on Proust
  • 25. The Heart of Expert Reading Expert Reading At the heart of reading,100 to 200 milliseconds allow us “time to think new thoughts”.
  • 26. “We feel quite truly that our wisdom begins with that of the author…By a law which perhaps signifies that we can receive the truth from nobody, that which is the end of their wisdom appears to us as but the beginning of ours.” “Nous sentons Marcel Proust tres bien que notre sagesse commence ou celle de l’auteur finit... “
  • 28. Inference Analogical Thinking Critical Analysis and Deliberation Insight and Epiphany Contemplation Going beyond the wisdom of the author
  • 29. 2. Can what we know about the Reading Brain illumine what we do not know about how reading and thought will develop in a digital culture ?
  • 30. What are the deeper implications of having a plastic reading circuit as we move to a digitally dominated set of mediums ?
  • 31. How do we think on-line? “The scariest thing about Stanley Kubrick’s vision wasn’t that computers started to act like people but that people had started to act like computers. We’re beginning to process information as if we’re nodes; it’s all about the speed of locating and reading data. We’re transferring our intelligence into the machine, and the machine is transferring its way of thinking into us.” Nick Carr in “Do you trust Google?”, WIRED, Jan. 2008
  • 32. Cognitive characteristics of on-line reading in the digital reading brain Continuous partial attention; less sustained attention and focus “Set” for immediacy and speed of processing Faster multi-tasking of large sets of information 37
  • 33. Differences in Attention: “Skimming is the new normal” Scanning, browsing, bouncing, keyword spotting (Liu, 2005, 2009) Less time on in-depth, concentrated reading Psychological reflex to “click” and move “set” Decreased sustained attention
  • 34. More attention to visual, external imagery Less emphases on touch and materiality Less internalization of knowledge, and more dependence on external sources
  • 35. Cognitive Effects of Multi-tasking: Brain Imaging Studies Brain Imaging Studies “Even if we can learn while distracted, it changes how you learn, making the learning less efficient and useful” “Multitasking hinders learning” Russ Poldrack (2006) Proceedings from National Academy of Science
  • 36. Touch and Materiality Factors: Kinesthesia and Synesthesia Emphases in Screen and Print “Near impossibility of getting immersed in hypertext in same way as getting lost in a book” (Mangen, 2009)
  • 37. Comprehension for On-Screen vs. Print Screen Print (Ackerman & Lauterman, 2012)
  • 38. The Formation of Deep ReadingHow does deep reading come to be?
  • 39. Cautions From the Last Transition Socrates feared that print would give the illusion of truth and create no ambition in the young beyond the superfluity of knowledge .
  • 40. Is superfluity (“shallow reading”) and the expectation for constant, immediate external information be the new threat for digital readers? Will these emphases short-circuit the reading brain?
  • 41. Will the process of internalization of knowledge require too much time and cognitive effort given immediate access to external knowledge Will imagination in childhood be displaced by too much that is given too quickly requiring too little effort ? Will the development of imagery in the child be displaced by visual imagery that is provided
  • 42. We can not go back to a pre-digital time; but, we should not lurch forward without understanding what we will lose , what we will gain , for our species’ cognitive repertoire.
  • 43. “It would be a shame if brilliant technology were to end up threatening the kind of intellect that produced it.” - Edward Tenner
  • 44. Three Questions of Kant (Dunne, 2012) What can we know? What should we do? What may we hope ?
  • 45. 3. Can knowledge about the “reading brain”, combined with multiple ways of knowing ---exemplified by Socrates/Aristotle, Proust, and Nicholas of Cusa--- propel a more hopeful approach to our transition?
  • 46. How do we prevent “Short circuiting” of deep reading brain while acquiring new skills necessary for the 21st Century?
  • 47. “A culture can be judged by how it pursues three lives: the life of activity and productivity, the life of enjoyment, the life of contemplation.” -Aristotle
  • 48. Massive information processing with more non-linear branching and iconic emphases Advantages of Digital Reading ➡ Speed and efficiency Brain for the Life ➡ Multi-tasking and of Activity and interactive communication Productivity ➡ Democratization of knowledge
  • 49. One of the greatest impediments to this form of reading is the “busy mind” that skips from one thought to the next without the capacity to enter the hidden depths of words that require both receptivity and the quiet focusing of attention. -Enzo Bianchi
  • 50. Advantages of Deep Reading Brain for the “Life of Contemplation”The time required by deep reading both in milliseconds during the reading act and in years of formation changes the quality of thought.
  • 51. “We transgress not because we try to build the new, but because we do not allow ourselves to consider what it disrupts or diminishes” -Sherry Turkle, Alone Together
  • 52. How do we resolve a “coincidence of opposites of believable truths”? -Nicholas of Cusa
  • 53. “learn-ed ignorance”A kind of knowing that is aware of its own limits: what we know what we do not know and what we need to know to understand and move forward. to understand and move forward.
  • 55. We know... ... our brain was never genetically programmed to read.
  • 56. We know... ... each reader must build a new reading circuit.
  • 57. We know... ... this reading circuit is plastic and influenced by the specific emphases of different writing systems and mediums
  • 58. We know... ... that the present reading brain is capable of both the most superficial and the deepest forms of reading, feeling, and thought
  • 59. What we do not know...
  • 60. We do not know... ... but we can predict that information will accelerate at rates that will make completely new demands on every person in the next generation. Courtesy of Ray Kurzweil and Kurzweil Technologies, Inc.
  • 61. We do not know... ...if immediate access to massive amounts of information will change the nature of internal processing during reading--- its deeper comprehension and the internalization of knowledge for future thoughts and insights beyond information given.
  • 62. We do not know... ... if the immediate access to this increasing amount of external information in the young will deter from the formation of “Deep Reading” processes or the desire to probe more deeply into its meaning or to go beyond it.
  • 63. We do not know... ... if such changes in internalized knowledge will result in a very different set of cognitive capacities to synthesize, infer from information, and go beyond it in very different, and more innovative ways than before, more appropriate for the digital culture.
  • 64. Three Questions of Kant (Dunne, 2012) What can we know? What should we do? What may we hope ?
  • 65. “I think there’s a common point between both worlds, and then there’s also a point of departure where they each demonstrate their own sort of possibilities.” -Mark Danielewski
  • 66.
  • 67. QuickTime™ et un décompresseur sont requis pour visionner cette image.
  • 68. How do we add to the repertoire of the expert “Knowing what we reading brain without do not Know” diminishing its present capacities? as the basis for our Questions How can the digital medium be designed to redress its own shortcomings?
  • 69. How can we create the conditions for new readers to develop a bi-literate brain and to know when to skim and when to dive deeply?
  • 70. A lecture about how the brain learns to leap beyond the information given shouldn’t have a last slide.....

Editor's Notes

  1. artmonqui - Monqui
  2. THIS SLIDE NEEDS TO BE COOLER!! THEN: We need to bring for next slide a version of the Pyramid of genes etc. We need to show how this view of Evolving Reading Brain leads to each kind of research we are involved in: Genetic, Imaging (John Gabrieli Collaboration), Dyslexia Diagnosis (RAN/RAS), Intervention (RAVE-O), Digital Influences (Samaritan); Global literacy (MIT)
  3. THIS SLIDE NEEDS TO BE COOLER!! THEN: We need to bring for next slide a version of the Pyramid of genes etc. We need to show how this view of Evolving Reading Brain leads to each kind of research we are involved in: Genetic, Imaging (John Gabrieli Collaboration), Dyslexia Diagnosis (RAN/RAS), Intervention (RAVE-O), Digital Influences (Samaritan); Global literacy (MIT)
  4. The story begins in pre-history
  5. Two Pyramidals, Greg Dunn
  6. No “Reading Center” in brain, rather a network of connected circuits Development must recruit these circuits and their connections Reading Pathology can involve a) failure or delay in development of system(s) b) or their connectedness c) or in their ability to reach automatic rates of processing 4. Intervention must address each of these systems, their connections, and their fluent rates
  7. In the Early Reading Brain Everything Matters
  8. In the Early Reading Brain Everything Matters
  9. Nous sentons tres bien que notre sagesse commence ou celle de l’auteur finit
  10. Contemplation (1938). Buisseret, Louis (1888-1956). Art Deco. Oil on fiberboard. Royal Museum of Fine Arts. Brussels, Belgium.
  11. This look at what we do when we read NOW leads us to the next question
  12. COgnition changes. Just as we have mirror neurons for people, we seem to have mirror neurons for computers!
  13. Will digital media change the capacity and motivation of children to learn more sophisticated capacities to think deeply and critically and autonomously?
  14. The decoration of this page from a French Book of Hours , ca.1400, includes a miniature, initials and borders
  15. Explain KInesthesia differences
  16. THIS SLIDE NEEDS TO BE COOLER!! THEN: We need to bring for next slide a version of the Pyramid of genes etc. We need to show how this view of Evolving Reading Brain leads to each kind of research we are involved in: Genetic, Imaging (John Gabrieli Collaboration), Dyslexia Diagnosis (RAN/RAS), Intervention (RAVE-O), Digital Influences (Samaritan); Global literacy (MIT)
  17. Biggest worry concerns the formation of processing deeper reading skills
  18. "Aristotle" by Francesco Hayez (1791–1882)
  19. Stegenga, Wil. "Pictoral Archive of Geometric Designs". NY: Dover, 1992. Print.  77.
  20. Coutesy of Ray Kurzweil and Kurzweil Tec hnologies, Inc.
  21. Authors Abraham,Anna ; Pieritz,Karo line ; Thybusch,K ristin ; Rutter,Bar bara ; Kröger,Sör en ; Schweckendiek, Jan ; Stark,Rudo lf ; Windmann,Sab ine ; Hermann ,Christiane Ti tle Creativity an d the brain: Uncov ering the ne ural signature of conceptual expansion Source Neuropsychologia , 2012, 50, 8, 1906-1917
  22. Portrait Of Edmond Maitre The Reader 1871 by Pierre Auguste Renoir