Humans have been on Earth for around 200,000 years but have only used symbols as a form of communication for a fraction of that time. Because of this, Mariano Sigman, author of "The Secret Life of The Mind: How Your Brain Thinks, Feels and Decides," explains why children must unlearn the natural way in which our brains recognize images and symbols.
See more from "The Secret Life of the Mind: How Your Brain Thinks, Feels, and Decides": https://www.amazon.com/Secret-Life-Mind-Thinks-Decides/dp/0316549622
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Following is the transcript of the video:
Mariano Sigman: We, and by we I mean modern humans, have been here on Earth for about 200,000 years. But only about 5,000 years ago, we discovered that we could convey what we were thinking using visual symbols. And this actually has been an incredible source for human cultural explosion. Suddenly, the thoughts we had could be written in a stone, later in a paper, but somewhere where it could be kept for generations and generations. This has been a major transformation of human culture. Now, this poses a very interesting puzzle for the biology of reading because 5,000 years are not long enough, to evolve or to change our brains for the capacity of reading. When we understand that, we also understand that there ought to be many ways on how the biological machinery for reading, are actually set from other domains of vision.
One of them, a very fundamental one, is that vision is essentially invariant rotations. So this is my hand, but this is also my hand, and this is also my hand, and this is also my hand. And this is true, essentially for all the objects we deal with. Now there is an exception for that, which is letters. If you get a "p" and you rotate it, it's a "q," and if you rotate it like this it's a "b" and then a "d." Actually letters are not rotation invariant. We've chosen visual symbols, it's just been the choice of our cultures that actually they do not have this property that the visual system outside of reading has.
So this explains something that actually seems very strange, very weird, but actually it's very natural, very simple, and quite extraordinary. Only parents know that when children start to write, they begin doing so writing words, so to say, normally in the same sense and orientation that we write them. But also spontaneously, when they begin to write, they will write the mirror image of the same words.
Now again, this often is something that remains unnoticed, sometimes some parents will say, oh that's kind of weird, or that's kind of strange, but at the same time we have to think that it's extraordinary, because it's something we cannot do. If an adult would like to do as children do, just to write the mirror image of the words, we would see that it's extremely difficult, we cannot do it, it takes a lot of effort. So how come children so young, they are doing something which we adults cannot even think of doing? And the reason is that they're using, for letters, the visual system as we use the visual system for all other things. Understanding that an image and the mirror rotation or reflection of that image corresponds to the same thing. This is how vision always works.
So one important thing of learning to write, is unlearning this property, that the reflection of on object corresponds to the same object. This is a very specific property of writing and children, through the process of learning, need to unlearn this thing that has been a regularity of the entire evolution of human vision.
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I thought everyone just did it for fun ?
ReplyDeleteThank god im still a kid
ReplyDeleteSince when was this a i have 3 younger siblings and such a thing never happened
ReplyDeleteWho tf writes backwards
ReplyDeleteWe don't write backwards in Vietnam :/
ReplyDeletewhat??? 0:02
ReplyDeleteMy cousin does some backwards letters
ReplyDeletethis is dyslexia right?
ReplyDeleteYep me had wrote backwards
ReplyDeleteThey do?? Wow. Those kids are legends because I can't even write a single letter back wards. I'm 9.5 yrs old and I have been writing correctly since about 5.7 years old.
ReplyDeletethey do?
ReplyDeleteecin oediv sknaht 👍
ReplyDeleteNANI!?
ReplyDeleteNo, they don't.
ReplyDeleteHonestly I think it’s about dyslexia
ReplyDeleteI never wrote backwards, I just put 14 lines on the capital Es.
ReplyDeleteI dont
ReplyDeleteIve never seen anyone write letters backwards
ReplyDeleteI thought that he talked backwards for the first 7 seconds
ReplyDeletedisleksia
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ReplyDeleteLike Stars On Earth. Every Child is Special.
ReplyDeleteWhere do kids write backwards? is this what the american education system is like?
ReplyDeleteSince when?
ReplyDeleteIh mi ton gnitirw siht gnorw!! Evelieb em llet no eht comments what I'm writing now "mi ton gniod gnorw" !!
ReplyDeleteWe could convey what we were thinking for way more than 5000 years as this guy says. Maybe 50,000 years ago is more accurate. Also this sounds like a load of bullshit, I mistook b and d for example because i simply forgot which way they were supposed to go, not because i was rotating the image in my mind or some shit.
ReplyDeleteGuys, they mean not whole sentences, just like d and b..
ReplyDeleteI dont think they do
ReplyDeleteI wrote S ...... backward
ReplyDeleteIts 2018 Guys not Caveman Era
ReplyDeletewait...so when I was a kid I write backward.....I don't remember
ReplyDeleteI used to write from right to left
ReplyDeleteI used to write from right to left
ReplyDeletewhen i was a kid i had a single word for every dam thing i knew and i legit thought i was actually speaking
ReplyDeleteWait what? Ive never heard of anyone who wrote backwards as a kid.
ReplyDeleteIt was always hard for me to write the number "5" up until I was 5-7years old
ReplyDeleteI used to do this
ReplyDeleteI only wrote E's upside down
ReplyDeleteI used to do that but then I got it right before others in my class so I was considered the smart guy.
ReplyDelete