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gorgabal | 2 months ago
There are more and more cases where my personal experience seems to contradict with science. And I am not sure what to make of that.
gorgabal | 2 months ago
There are more and more cases where my personal experience seems to contradict with science. And I am not sure what to make of that.
cycomanic|2 months ago
The article says that participants in the studies preferred the traditional fonts over the dyslexia fonts. I would argue that this contradicts the thesis that they would be more comfortable to read. Moreover, the way I read the article, it wasn't just reading speed but accuracy that was tested as well.
> There are more and more cases where my personal experience seems to contradict with science. And I am not sure what to make of that.
I find that I often have to question my preconceptions when I encounter this issue. In other words, I have invested e.g. time, effort and thought into something which I thought works and it is difficult to not fall into a kind of sunken cost fallacy, i.e. my brain doesn't want me to believe it does not work, because I have invested effort into it.
icegreentea2|2 months ago
It's possible that the test used does not generalize to other reading contexts and populations.
nemomarx|2 months ago