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by huhtenberg
4787 days ago
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Please don't pull a Wikipedia on me here. As an old physicist joke goes - Experimental physicist comes to a theoretical physicist office,
bring a graph from a recent experiment and asks for a help with
interpreting the results.
- Well, it's all rather obvious. Here's a peak, here's a dip,
because of this, that and third.
- Hold it, hold it... you are looking at it upside down.
- Ah, right, right. *Rotates the graph*. Oh, it's now even more
obvious than before.
In other words, the "actual science" you are referring to frequently ends up to be nothing more than a matter of interpretation and a subject to all sorts of biases. Especially when it concerns something as unquantifiable as "comfort of reading". Just pick up a couple of fiction books, one set in serif and another in sans-serif, go through a pageful of text and see for yourself. |
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Comfort of reading is very quantifiable. You can present text to a bunch of people in serif and sans serif fonts (double-blind and randomized) and ask them to rate how pleasant the text was. You can be clever and ask questions that measure understanding and retention, or you can ask them how much they enjoyed reading the passage, and these will give you indirect measures of reading comfort. Or you can be blunt and ask if they enjoy reading in the font, though this will pick up biases more. Either way is significantly more scientific than an appeal to common knowledge, though.
> Just pick up a couple of fiction books, one set in serif and another in sans-serif, go through a pageful of text and see for yourself.
This isn't science. This is just bias confirmation. ("Wow, I prefer the one I expected to prefer!")
But for the record, my e-reader font is set to Gill Sans.