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olah_1 | 2 years ago
I said being able to see the word shape is very helpful. I did not say that you can read based on the word shape alone.
olah_1 | 2 years ago
I said being able to see the word shape is very helpful. I did not say that you can read based on the word shape alone.
thaumasiotes|2 years ago
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/typography/develop/word-re...
> The weakest evidence in support of word shape is that lowercase text is read faster than uppercase text. This is entirely a practice effect. Most readers spend the bulk of their time reading lowercase text and are therefore more proficient at it. When readers are forced to read large quantities of uppercase text, their reading speed will eventually increase to the rate of lowercase text.
> Haber & Schindler (1981) found that readers were twice as likely to fail to notice a misspelling in a proofreading task when the misspelling was consistent with word shape (tesf, 13% missed) than when it is inconsistent with word shape (tesc, 7% missed). This is seemingly a convincing result until you realize that word shape and letter shape are confounded. The study compared errors that were consistent both in word and letter shape to errors that are inconsistent both in word and letter shape. Paap, Newsome, & Noel (1984) determined the relative contribution of word shape and letter shape and found that the entire effect is driven by letter shape.
Word shape is not relevant to anything.