Those Who Write by Hand Use Their Brains More Than Those Who Type

Those Who Write by Hand Use Their Brains More Than Those Who Type

Writing by Hand Or Using The Keyboard? What is more convenient and expedally What is good for directing the chice toward one instrument or the ’ other? Research conducted by French and norwegian neurophysiologists confirms that something is indeed lost in the transition from pen to keyboard.

The Study, Published in Advances in Haptics, Provs that writing by Hand “ TURNS ON ” Our Brains Much More Than Typing on Keyboard. When Writing on Paper, Our Eyes and Hand Movements Follow the Creation of the Letter: As We Trace the Mark of A “ S ” We see and “ Feel ” Slowly Forming The Curves That Make It Up. And this fires up many More Brain Areas Than Typing the Same “ S ” On a computer: in fact, in this case, all you have to do is press a key and there it is on the screen, in one piece. Writing by hand Involves Visual, Facial-Motor, and Facial-Constructive Skills Fare Superior to Simply Typing on a Keyboard.

Once readers are learned, However, We are Interested in A Child Learning to Express Concepts and Ideas in Writing. In this case, The Computer Can Tests in Valuable Support: It Can in Fact Help Children, Through Specific Software, To Identify and Correct Writing Errors and Thus produces A More Correct And Richer Text. The Use of Computers TODAY IS A Non-Negigible Resource where it has an supplementary Functionality.

Conversely, the “digital natives” children born after 2000, who are more accustomed to virtual reality than real life, in the transition to life “technological” indeed seem to be in danger of forgetting (or not learning!!) skills useful in everyday life, such as tying shoes or riding a bicycle, as a Czechoslovakian research conducted recently “questioning” 2,200 mothers of children aged 2 to 5 tells us.