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Is listening to audiobook considered cheating?
Reading and listening both result in comprehension, which the brain accomplishes by translating written or heard words into words in the mind — a process called decoding. So, in short, listening to audiobooks isn’t “cheating” as some die-hard readers might purport.
Why are audiobooks cheating?
For most books, for most purposes, listening and reading are more or less the same thing. Listening to an audiobook might be considered cheating if the act of decoding were the point; audio books allow you to seem to have decoded without doing so. But if appreciating the language and the story is the point, it’s not.
Is it bad to read with an audiobook?
“We found no significant differences in comprehension between reading, listening, or reading and listening simultaneously,” Rogowsky says. So it’s possible that, had her study pitted traditional books against audiobooks, old-school reading might have come out on top.
Why audiobooks are not cheating?
A new study from neuroscientists at the University of California-Berkeley found that whether you’re reading a story or listening to it, you’re activating the same parts of your brain. In other words, audiobooks and podcasts can be great alternatives if books aren’t your thing. They’re just as mentally engaging.
Can you listen to an audiobook while sleeping?
Absorbing complex information or picking up a new skill from scratch by, say, listening to an audio recording during sleep is almost certainly impossible. But research shows that the sleeping brain is far from idle and that some forms of learning can happen.
What do audiobooks do to your brain?
According to the Audio Publishers Association, audiobooks help “build and enhance vital literacy skills such as fluency, vocabulary, language acquisition, pronunciation, phonemic awareness, and comprehension—skills that often boost reading scores.” Need some audiobook recommendations for kids?