Bouma

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For the geological usage see: Bouma sequence.
For the football (soccer) player see: Wilfred Bouma.

The term bouma (pronounced /ˈboʊmə/, or approximately "bowmuh") is sometimes used in the work of cognitive psychology to mean the shape of a cluster of letters, often a whole word.

Some typographers believe that, when reading, people can recognize words by deciphering boumas, not just individual letters. The claim is that this is a natural strategy for increasing reading efficiency. However, considerable study and experimentation by cognitive psychologists has led to their general acceptance of a different, and largely contradictory, theory: parallel letterwise recognition.

The term bouma is a reduction of "Bouma-shape", which was probably first used in Paul Saenger's 1997 book "Space between Words: The Origins of Silent Reading", although Saenger himself attributes it to Insup & Maurice Martin Taylor. Its origin is in reference to hypotheses by a prominent vision researcher, H. Bouma, who studied the shapes and confusability of letters and letter strings.

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[edit] References

Bouma, H. (1971). Visual Recognition of Isolated Lower-Case Letters. Vision Research, 11, 459-474.

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