Mr. Simple
3.7K posts

Mr. Simple
@ToBeAdviced
Penganut americano tanpa gula | Pelari Musiman | Musikus Kamar

Emang paling bener "KEEP THE CIRCLE SMALL" deh, apalagi aku gak ngejar monet/payout.🤣 Jadi rame gini malah kena penyakitan akun X ku, TL temen-temen lama jg tenggelem. dulu pas puluhan aja ada aja yang gak kesapa, apalagi ratusan. trus agak sungkan ngetweet nakal klo gini mah hahaha~ Sooner or later I will consider locked my account, lets see for now..
















🎉👩❤️👨 𝗢𝗺𝗲𝗱-𝗢𝗺𝗲𝗱𝗮𝗻: 𝗧𝗿𝗮𝗱𝗶𝘀𝗶 𝗖𝗶𝘂𝗺𝗮𝗻 𝗠𝗮𝘀𝘀𝗮𝗹 𝗱𝗶 𝗕𝗮𝗹𝗶? 👩❤️💋👨🎉 Eits, tenang. Ini bukan acara buat berciuman seenaknya. Jadi, jangan bayangin yg negatif dulu, ya! 🤗 Yuk, kita bahas lebih lanjut! 🧐





Went down the rabbit hole on this. Your brain treats a physical book like a landscape. It builds a spatial map of the text, the same way it maps trails, rooms, and city blocks. When you scroll on a phone, that map breaks apart. Seven large-scale research reviews and direct brain scans confirm what you already feel. A 2023 study in PLOS ONE attached brain-activity sensors to children’s heads while they read the same text on paper and on screen. Paper reading produced fast brain waves, the pattern linked to focused attention. Screen reading shifted the brain into slow waves, the pattern linked to mind wandering and daydreaming. Same kids. Same words. Measurably different brain states. A separate 2022 study from Showa University in Japan scanned the front of the brain, the area that manages focus and comprehension, during phone versus paper reading. Smartphones sent that region into overdrive, meaning the brain was straining just to keep up with basic processing. Paper reading produced a moderate load that triggered natural deep breathing, which helped regulate brain function and sustain focus. The phone suppressed that breathing pattern entirely. Since 2017, researchers have published seven major reviews combining hundreds of individual studies. Six of seven reached the same conclusion: people understand less on screens. A 2018 review of 54 studies and 170,000+ participants, literally titled “Don’t throw away your printed books,” found paper outperformed screens across the board for non-fiction. A 2024 follow-up with 49 more studies confirmed it. The gap has grown steadily every year since 2001. Being a “digital native” doesn’t help. The best explanation is how your brain tracks where you are. Your short-term memory can only juggle about 7 things at once. A physical book gives you constant location cues: the weight shifting from right hand to left, where a paragraph sits on the page, how thick the remaining pages feel. Your brain hands off the “where am I in this text?” job to those physical signals, leaving more room for actually understanding what you’re reading. On a phone, every screen looks identical. Your brain has to track position and process meaning at the same time, and something gives. A Norwegian eye-tracking study analyzing 25,000+ individual eye movements found screen readers processed text more shallowly. The students had no idea they were reading differently. In 2019, nearly 200 reading scientists from 30+ countries signed an open letter warning that screen reading was degrading deep comprehension. Since then, Scandinavian countries, among the most digitized school systems on Earth, have started putting physical books back in classrooms.









