Showing posts with label Widespread Brain Connectivity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Widespread Brain Connectivity. Show all posts

Friday, June 13, 2025

NICHOLAS FABIANO: Handwriting leads to widespread brain connectivity - typing does not.


When writing by hand, brain connectivity patterns were far more elaborate than when typewriting on a keyboard, as shown by widespread theta/alpha connectivity coherence patterns between network hubs and nodes in parietal and central brain regions. Existing literature indicates that connectivity patterns in these brain areas and at such frequencies are crucial for memory formation and for encoding new information and, therefore, are beneficial for learning. Our findings suggest that the spatiotemporal pattern from visual and proprioceptive information obtained through the precisely controlled hand movements when using a pen, contribute extensively to the brain's connectivity patterns that promote learning. We urge that children, from an early age, must be exposed to handwriting activities in school to establish the neuronal connectivity patterns that provide the brain with optimal conditions for learning. 

Here, rewrite paragraphs from this essay, "Jefferson Davis on Robert E. Lee," onto a sheet of paper in cursive.  Enjoy.