Comment by spiralcoaster
3 months ago
What people do you know that do this? I absolutely read in a linear fashion unless I'm deliberately skimming something to get the gist of it. Who can read the text "all at once"?!
3 months ago
What people do you know that do this? I absolutely read in a linear fashion unless I'm deliberately skimming something to get the gist of it. Who can read the text "all at once"?!
I do this. I'm autistic and have ADHD so I'm not representative of the normal person. However, I don't think this is entirely uncommon.
The relevant technical term is "saccade"
> ADHD: Studies have shown a consistent reduction in ability to suppress unwanted saccades, suggesting an impaired functioning of areas like the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex.
> Autism: An elevated number of antisaccade errors has been consistently reported, which may be due to disturbances in frontal cortical areas.
https://eyewiki.org/Saccade
Also see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eye_movement_in_reading
I do this too. I suspect it may involve a subtly different mechanism from the saccade itself though? If the saccade is the behavior, and per the eyewiki link skimming is a voluntary type of saccade, there’s still the question of what leads me to use that behavior when I read (and others to read more linearly). Although you could certainly watch my eyes “saccade” around as I move nonlinearly through a passage, I’m not sure it’s out of a lack of control.
Rather, I feel like I absorb written meaning in units closer to paragraphs than to words or sentences. I’d describe my rapid up-and-down, back-and-forth eye motions as something closer to going back to soak up more, if that makes sense. To reinterpret it in the context of what came after it. The analogy that comes to mind is to a Progressive JPEG getting crisper as more loads.
That eyewiki entry was really cool. Among the unexpectedly interesting bits:
> The initiation of a saccade takes about 200 milliseconds[4]. Saccades are said to be ballistic because the movements are predetermined at initiation, and the saccade generating system cannot respond to subsequent changes in the position of the target after saccade initiation[4].
If you're an adult you probably have compensated for the saccades and developed a strategy that doesn't force you to read linearly. This is much of what "speed reading" courses try to do intentionally.
also ping pong around the page (ADHD'r). At times I read a sentance or two in linear fashion, then start jumping, or start or move to the end and read backwards, or any mix of this depending.
I don't know how common it is, but I tend to read novels in a buttered heterogeneous multithreading mode - image and logical and emotional readings all go at each their own paces, rather than a singular OCR engine feeding them all with 1D text
is that crazy? I'm not buying it is
That description feels relatable to me. Maybe buffered more than buttered, in my case ;)
It seems to me that would be a tick in the “pro” column for this idea of using pixels (or contours, a la JPEG) as the models’ fundamental stimulus to train against (as opposed to textual tokens). Isn’t there a comparison to be drawn between the “threads” you describe here, and the multi-headed attention mechanisms (or whatever it is) that the LLM models use to weigh associations at various distances between tokens?
Don't know, probably? I'm a linear reader