If you still prefer physical books over e‑readers, you process information in these 8 unique ways

by Lachlan Brown | July 25, 2025, 10:55 am

E‑readers are lighter in a backpack and can hold a lifetime’s reading list, yet global surveys keep finding that most people still reach for a printed book whenever they can. Scientists have spent the past decade trying to explain this stubborn preference, comparing everything from eye‑tracking patterns to fMRI scans.

What they’ve uncovered is striking: the medium itself changes how you process information, not just how you access it.

Here are eight distinct mental processes that tilt in favor of paper.

1. You build a mental “map” of the text

The physical act of turning pages and sensing weight‑in‑hand creates spatial landmarks.

Readers unconsciously note that the key definition was “about a third of the way in on a left‑hand page,” so retrieving it later is easier.

Experiments comparing long‑form reading on a Kindle DX to a paperback showed print readers “re‑located” plot points far more accurately, thanks to kinesthetic and tactile cues. 

2. Comprehension and memory get a measurable boost

A 2022 meta‑analysis covering 54 studies found that readers consistently score higher on comprehension tests after reading printed material.

The difference is small—but reliable—across age groups and genres.

More recent classroom trials replicate the gap even when students have grown up on screens.

3. Your eyes (and brain) avoid digital fatigue

Near‑work studies report significantly more dry‑eye, blurred vision, and headaches after 30 minutes on an e‑reader or tablet than with the same text on paper—even when back‑lighting is optimized for comfort.

Ophthalmologists link the strain to reduced blink rate and high‑frequency flicker from LED backlights, both absent on a printed page. 

4. Fewer pop‑ups = deeper focus

Digital reading often happens on multi‑use devices that ping with notifications or tempt you to tap hyperlinks.

Eye‑tracking research shows that every on‑screen distraction—ad banners, badge notifications, even inactive sidebars—increases cognitive load and fragments memory consolidation.

Print environments eliminate that constant task‑switching overhead.

5. You measure your own learning more accurately

Metacognition—knowing how well you understand—guides decisions like rereading a tricky paragraph.

Studies of university students reveal that screen readers consistently over‑estimate their grasp, while print readers’ confidence levels align closely with test scores.

Accurate self‑monitoring leads to better study strategies and long‑term retention.

6. Hands, eyes, and brain learn together (embodied cognition)

Page turning, margin‑scribbling, even the subtle resistance of paper recruit fine‑motor and spatial circuits that reinforce neural encoding.

Research on handwriting versus typing shows similar benefits: tactile engagement translates into richer memory traces. With an e‑reader, those haptic cues are largely stripped away.

7. Stories hit the empathy switch more powerfully

Physical books encourage what psychologists call narrative transportation—total immersion in a story world.

When readers report high transportation, laboratory measures show spikes in both emotional and cognitive empathy and increases in prosocial intention.

Recent work suggests that transportation scores—and the empathy bump that follows—are strongest when reading fiction on paper rather than on screens.

8. Slower, reflection‑rich reading deepens critical thought

On screens we’re primed to skim, scroll, and hunt for keywords; printed text nudges us to linger.

Librarians and literacy researchers note that paper reading encourages “slow processing,” allowing you to pause, annotate, and connect ideas—skills linked to analytical reasoning and creativity.

This deliberate pace is harder to sustain amid the rapid‐fire architecture of digital media.

Conclusion

Choosing a hard‑cover over an e‑ink slab isn’t just an aesthetic preference. It shapes comprehension, focus, memory, empathy, and even eye health in subtle but cumulative ways.

That doesn’t mean you must abandon digital reading—screens excel for portability and search—but it does suggest that balancing formats can give your brain the best of both worlds.

So the next time you crack the spine of a paperback, remember: you’re not being old‑fashioned; you’re engaging a sophisticated cognitive toolkit that’s evolved alongside the printed page.

Lachlan Brown

Lachlan Brown is an entrepreneur and co-founder of Brown Brothers Media, a digital publishing network reaching tens of millions of readers monthly. He holds a Graduate Diploma of Psychological Studies from Deakin University, though his real education came afterward: a warehouse job shifting TVs, a stretch of anxiety in his mid-twenties, and the slow discovery that studying the mind is not the same as learning how to live well. He started experimenting with Buddhist principles during breaks at the warehouse and eventually began writing about what he was learning. That writing became Hack Spirit, a widely read personal development site, and his book Hidden Secrets of Buddhism became a bestseller. His work breaks down complex ideas into frameworks people can apply immediately, whether they are navigating a career change, a difficult relationship, or the gap between knowing what to do and actually doing it. Lachlan splits his time between Singapore and Saigon. He writes about high-performance routines, decision-making under pressure, digital innovation, and the intersection of Eastern philosophy with modern life. His perspective comes from having built things from scratch, failed at some of them, and learned that clarity comes from practice, not theory.