When we start reading a piece of text, how do our brains know to read it in such a way that accounts for both the upcoming punctuation and sentence structure that we haven’t gotten to yet? 558 viewsJanuary 3, 2024 Question90.53K February 23, 2021 0 Comments When we start reading a piece of text, how do our brains know to read it in such a way that accounts for both the upcoming punctuation and sentence structure that we haven’t gotten to yet? In: Biology 7 Answers ActiveNewestOldest Anonymous Posted February 23, 2021 0 Comments Your brain processes your peripheral vision even though you aren’t focused on it. Not a scientist. You are viewing 1 out of 7 answers, click here to view all answers. Register or Login
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