Spacing, not size of letters, matters when it comes to reading from a distance

Florida Statesman (ANI) Friday 26th September, 2008

Washington, Sept 26 : It's not the size of the letters, but spacing between them, which makes it hard for us to read a book from a distance, according to New York University neuroscientists.

The same applies to objects, including letters, animals, and furniture, which can only be recognized only if they are separated by enough space, the "critical spacing." Objects closer than that spacing are "crowded" and cannot be identified.

The critical spacing is a key parameter in the brain's cortical architecture underlying object recognition, said authors, NYU Professor of Psychology and Neural Science Denis Pelli and Katharine Tillman, an undergraduate researcher in NYU's College of Arts and Science.

"The idea that spacing limits object recognition could not be simpler, but it has been very hard to accept because it displaces a firmly held belief that visibility is limited by size, not spacing," wrote Pelli and Tillman.

The human visual system recognizes a simple object by detecting and then combining its features (lines or edges). But this process is hampered when, in seeking to identify an object in clutter, your brain combines features over too large an area surrounding the object, failing to isolate the object's features from those of the clutter.

Page 1 of 2 | Next

Share this article:
Back to Florida Statesman

Comments

  • No comments yet for this story

  • Have your say

    • By submitting your comment you agree to our terms and conditions

    Featured Story

    A workman who disappeared from St. Petersburg's Mariinsky Theatre in December was found hanging in the theatre's attic, investigators said.

    The body of the 22-year-old man was found hanging from a ...

    Record Your Vote

    The Boy Scouts of America National Council has resolved to accept gay members. Do you agree with this policy?

    View results

    On Facebook

    Quotable Quotes

    We must define the nature and scope of this struggle, or else it will define us. Neither I, nor any President can promise the total defeat of terror. What we must do is dismantle networks that pose a direct danger.

    Barack Obama

    The U.S. president was speaking on his administration's counter terrorism policy.