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It often doesn't really. It misses a ton and fills in the gaps itself. It is aimilar with multitasking in that it is really just fast task switching and filling the gaps.
I maan, there are dedinitely people that specifically train to speed read or listen, but i would be interested to have people speed read/listen short novels or so and check for comprehension after the fact.
Remember that people are bell-curve shaped, right?
Just because normal people can do some something at some specific speed, doesn't mean that that limit holds for ALL people.
There are people who can read a page at a glance, with full comprehension.
Not many, but they aren't prohibited by universe, they are prohibited by our assumption.
My fave example is Feynman.
In Glieck's book "Genius", there is some normal physicist who spent 1/2-year ( 365/2-days ) working-out a theory, & then presented it in a lecture, at a gathering.
Feynman wasn't a witness of that lecture.
He heard about it, later, & that night he worked-through the same theory ( 1/2-days ), then in the morning, went hunting the physicist-in-question, finding him, he demanded "is that what you got??"
The poor guy was horrified: in 1/365 of the time it had taken him to do it, Feynman had taken the theory further then he had.
The other's in Mlodinow's book about Feynman mentoring him.
He & another worked-out some quantum-optics stuff, again in 1/2y, but it contradicted the established work.
In 1/2-hour, Feynman got enough understanding of it, that he told them to publish, because they aren't making any mistakes, & that meant, to him, that the established stuff was probably wrong.
It was.
You can't compete against everybody, if you're normal.
The book "Barking Up The Wrong Tree" ( author: Barker ) is entirely on this principle that we're getting wrong.
Whole-society-wide wrong.
The truly-exceptional are different from the normal.
& that's just how diversity works..
Life's neater, this way, to me..
_ /\ _