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Old 08-29-2011, 04:52 PM   #40
Salgueiros
Eudaimonia
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Location: Vancouver, Canada
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Skip Wyona View Post
I agree that fiction seems better for the e-book format. Non-fiction on an e-book reader is difficult for me. I wondered about that for a while until I came across some research studies that concluded that the tactile process of turning pages, going back over pages, marking text with your finger as you read, etc, of paper based books are all memory retention aids. The conclusions were that you remember more of what you read if you use a paper-based book, or, alternately, take notes while you read using any other reading format. I understand that retention is not necessarily all that important for fiction unless you need to review, analyze or report about what you have read. I also assume that reading modalities vary from individual to individual. Personally, I am a visual learning and I have observed that I get more out of paper-based books than other formats. I am worst at retention of material presented in audio such as audiobooks. Similar research has confirmed these differences in retention between textbook learning and computer learning. This is why I will always prefer paper-based material. I am a big user of electronically formatted material but I consider it a supplement, not a substitute, for paper-based books.

I agree. I never remember as much of what i read of a ebook than from a paperbook. Probably it is those memory aids you refer to. And going back and forth on a pbook is way more simpler than on a ebook at the current state of technology.

I have substituted pbooks for ebooks in some of my activities, but not completely. Maybe one day, but for me that day is not close yet.

Last edited by Salgueiros; 08-29-2011 at 04:54 PM.
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