There seems to be a moderately hard speed-comprehension tradeoff curve. A few techniques might shift the curve outward, letting you have more speed and more comprehension, but mostly they give you more flexibility to choose where you want to be on the curve.
This matches my experience. Speed reading software like Textcelerator is nice when I want to go through a fluff story at 1200 WPM, but anything remotely technical requires me to be at 400-600 at most, and speedreading does not fundamentally affect this limit.
True. I’ve always read things around that speed by default, though, so it’s not related to speedreading techniques, and I don’t know how to improve the average person’s default speed.
True. I’ve always read things around that speed by default
“default” is a deceptive word. You probably didn’t read at that speed when you where 10 years old. Somewhere along the lines you learned it. Given that you learned it and don’t know how you learned it, there also no good reason to assume that you are at the maximum that’s possible.
There seems to be a moderately hard speed-comprehension tradeoff curve. A few techniques might shift the curve outward, letting you have more speed and more comprehension, but mostly they give you more flexibility to choose where you want to be on the curve.
This matches my experience. Speed reading software like Textcelerator is nice when I want to go through a fluff story at 1200 WPM, but anything remotely technical requires me to be at 400-600 at most, and speedreading does not fundamentally affect this limit.
Reading technical material at 600 WPM would still be much faster than the average person.
True. I’ve always read things around that speed by default, though, so it’s not related to speedreading techniques, and I don’t know how to improve the average person’s default speed.
“default” is a deceptive word. You probably didn’t read at that speed when you where 10 years old. Somewhere along the lines you learned it. Given that you learned it and don’t know how you learned it, there also no good reason to assume that you are at the maximum that’s possible.