Simulate the scene mentally as you read or listen
Construct a sensorimotor simulation of described events rather than just parsing words.
Why it works
Comprehension research finds that readers who mentally simulate the situations described in text — tracking the implied physical state of objects and characters — have better comprehension and retention than those who process primarily at the linguistic level. The brain appears to re-enact described actions using the same sensorimotor systems that would execute real actions.
How to do it
- When reading, periodically pause and construct a scene: where is everyone, what does it look like, feel like, smell like?
- For procedural content, mentally mime the described actions as you read each step.
- After reading a passage, reproduce the scene from your simulation, not just from the words.
Evidence
Situation model research shows that comprehension is supported by mental simulation of described states. Several studies find that implied physical incompatibilities between successive sentences slow reading and increase errors, consistent with readers tracking a simulated physical world. (observational)
Effect sizes are often moderate; highly skilled readers may integrate multiple strategies, and the benefit of explicit simulation instruction for adults is less studied than the phenomenon itself.
Sources
- Zwaan et al. (2002), "The immersed experiencer: toward an embodied theory of language comprehension", Psychology of Learning and Motivation
Common mistake
Reading for linguistic gist — processing the grammar and logic of sentences without constructing a concrete world — which produces recall of structure but not of meaning.
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