|
|
P U B L I C
P R E S E N T A T I O N S
|
|
|
|
Gestural Exercises, Excursions into the
Visual Cortex, and Design
In part 1, I suggest that time and usability-tested typographic practice sets up
a rhythmic spacing in separated words that might be antagonistic to a segregation
of feature level information into independent processing channels according to letter.
Typographic spacing encourages the formation of an alternative to a ‘segregation by
letter’-based process — an alternative that moves directly from the pattern of
distinctive features or sub-letter parts to the identity of the word.
|
| | | |