Why C is not G: How we identify letters

November 25, 2008

The next time you are reading a book, or even as you read this article, consider the words that you are seeing. How do you recognize these words? Substantial research has shown that while reading, we recognize words by their letters and not by the general shape of the word. However, it was largely unknown how we differentiate one letter from another.

Psychologist Daniel Fiset from the University of Victoria and his colleagues investigated which features of letters are necessary for their identification. In these experiments, the researchers used the "Bubbles" technique, in which randomly sampled areas of a letter were shown to volunteers. The researchers then evaluated which areas of each of the 26 letters of the Roman alphabet were crucial for letter recognition.

The results, reported in the November issue of Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, reveal that the most important features for identifying both upper and lower case letters are the points where the letters end, also known as line terminations. The presence of horizontal lines in the letters was the second most important feature for letter recognition.

To compare the human volunteers' use of letter features with optimal use of the provided information, the researchers developed an "ideal-observer" model, which used all of the visual information that was available for letter identification. There were some notable differences comparing the human results to those of the ideal observer. For instance, the most useful feature of letters for the ideal observer were vertical lines and curves opening up and not line terminations. The authors note that the human visual system is believed to be specialized in the processing of line terminations, which allow us to recognize and distinguish surrounding objects. They suggest that the great importance of terminations for letter recognition results from an interaction between the relative usefulness of this feature and a strong natural tendency of the human visual system to encode it.

The researchers conclude that these findings may lead to the development of fonts which could result in improved and faster letter recognition, both for normal readers and individuals with letter-by-letter dyslexia.

Source: Association for Psychological Science


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  • Omnitheo - Nov 25, 2008
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    or perhaps an entirely new set of characters to replace the roman ones
  • thematrix606 - Nov 25, 2008
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    Omnitheo, I would say Symbols and not Characters...
  • dbren - Nov 25, 2008
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    How about Kanji-based Esperanto?
  • Arikin - Nov 25, 2008
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    Yes dbren you are right. They should test this with kanji too. Lots of line terminations in each stroke...
  • superhuman - Dec 01, 2008
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    For instance, the most useful feature of letters for the ideal observer were vertical lines and curves opening up and not line terminations


    Most useful based on what criteria?

    Letters are defined by line terminations not by curves which is why we use them. Curves differ between font types while positions of line terminations are much more constant.

    Another reason is that when comparing normal lines to line terminations the difference takes a larger proportion of detail area then is the case when you compare lines to curves. This is especially true for small fonts.

    Take a look at this font for example, curves are hardly there while line terminations are easy to spot.

November 25, 2008 all stories

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