gwendolyngrace: (Default)
gwendolyngrace ([personal profile] gwendolyngrace) wrote2010-08-28 01:52 pm

One to Ponder

Okay, so here's something to think about.

The other night, Joel and I were talking about living alone and the high (IMO) density of people who talk to themselves when they live alone or spend a lot of time alone. In the Gweniverse, I'm never completely alone, though, because character-muses constantly provide the opposing voice in my internal dialogue. Like Tom Hanks' character in Cast Away anthropomorphizes "Wilson," I think we as humans need someone to bounce off of, even when that someone is a figment of imagination.

So we're talking about this, and I was saying that it's often characters from books, or TV or movies, and I mentioned how driving is a huge opportunity for this process, and how often these days Will Laurence or Temeraire are my co-pilots (Temeraire because he's a very fun conversationalist and Laurence because he occupies that lovely "straight man" capacity), and that when Granby's in the back seat it's even worse.

And Joel, who's just read His Majesty's Dragon, said he didn't know who Granby was - because, as he put it, he'd "never heard the word pronounced." I said that he'd read the book - he should recognize the name.

And then he said that he never internalizes the pronunciation of proper nouns and names while he's reading things.

I find that fascinating and impossible. I asked about maps: Does he "hear" the pronunciation of streets and such when reading the map? No. He "sees" them as glyphs and then looks for the glyph that matches the picture in his memory.

Bzuh?

So... what we want to know is how anomalous that is, or whether I'm the one who's odd in always figuring out how to say people and place-names when I'm reading. I've known for a long, long time that I prefer to "hear" the words spoken in my head as I read - it's one of the reasons I'm a slow reader - but is that "normal" or is it more normal to take in the word without an attempt to "speak" it and then simply recognize it on repetition? Is it a difference in thought? Teaching? Or actual brain process?

Discuss.

[identity profile] gwendolyngrace.livejournal.com 2010-08-29 06:06 am (UTC)(link)
I do visually process things now and then - I have extremely good recall skills, and for example in my art appreciation classes in school I could memorize the looks of various artists MUCH more quickly than my classmates (and to this day can tell a Rothko or a Miro or a Vasarely by a very quick visual). I also recognize faces extremely well and can frequently remember the context in which I know a person, say a 2nd- or 3rd-tier actor in a show, I can recognize them from a different movie or television program and half the time tell you who they played.

I also write my lines longhand when I'm memorizing them, but I also listen to them and gain a HUGE amount of sense memory once blocking is added.

But yeah, I'm with you on the reading thing. And I certainly wouldn't have expected someone to not even recognize a major character on *hearing* the name, even if he hadn't bothered to figure out how to pronounce it beforehand.