The World is on YouTube! Check us out and subscribe.

Donate

e-readers

A commuter reads on a Kindle e-reader while riding the subway in Cambridge, Mass. Neuroscience says the way his brain treats reading on the Kindle is different than the way the brain processes the newspaper next to him.

Your paper brain and your Kindle brain aren’t the same thing

September 18, 2014Technology

If you’ve given up on reading paper books for the ease of your e-reader’s screen, you may want to step back a bit. Neuroscience confirms that our brains use different areas to read on paper and screens, and you need to exercise both.

Latest Headlines

A rapper finds peace and a channel for his activism through hip-hop and Islam
Hopes for calm after clashes in southern Syria and airstrikes in Damascus
PEPFAR and the future of the global fight against HIV
College campuses across the UK fight for free speech as protests come under scrutiny
Cuban medical missions face scrutiny amid allegations of forced labor
Accusations of falsehoods in popular memoir ‘The Salt Path’ stoke controversy
After the bombs, Iranians struggle to rebuild and recover
Tibetans in Massachusetts celebrate 14th Dalai Lama’s 90th birthday
Medical wax museum in Spain showcasing 19th-century diseases is set to close
20 years after London’s deadliest bombings, extremist threat grows more complex
More stories

The World is a public radio program that crosses borders and time zones to bring home the stories that matter.

Produced by

Thanks to our sponsor

  1. Progressive Insurance logo

Major funding provided by

  1. Carnegie Corporation of New York
  2. MacArthur Foundation
  3. Ford Foundation
  4. Corporation for Public Broadcasting

  1. About
  2. Contact
  3. Donate
  4. Meet the Team
  5. Privacy
  6. Terms of use

©2025 The World from PRX

PRX is a 501(c)(3) organization recognized by the IRS: #263347402.