Milliseconds Matter: Understanding How We Read with Eye-Tracking Research
Ryan Buggy of The Reading League is a PhD student in cognitive psychology, and is currently using eye tracking technology to study how the brain processes language. Ryan discusses the cognitive processes that impact reading and language and what the latest eye-tracking research can tell us about how we read. Based on this research, Ryan also shares best practices for educators and practitioners. Mentioned in the episode: The Road to Running Records (https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.3...) The Reading League Journal: Measure What Matters (https://www.thereadingleague.org/wp-c...) ACT: Reading Between the Lines (https://www.act.org/content/dam/act/u...)

▶︎
A Speech Language Pathologist's Approach to NVLD

▶︎
Answering Why: Looking at Processing With Dr. Steven Feifer

▶︎
Creating a Space for All of Us: Teaching About Accessibility with Zero Barriers

▶︎
AI will replace tasks, not teachers with Peter Nilsson

▶︎
The French Do Not Care About Work

▶︎
Alyssa Mairanz on How Grief Shapes Your Decisions During Divorce

▶︎
Harvard Professor Explains The Rules of Writing — Steven Pinker

▶︎
Dr. John King Jr: Supporting Learning for All

▶︎
12 traits emotionally intelligent people share (You can learn them) | Daniel Goleman for Big Think+

▶︎
What do tech pioneers think about the AI revolution? - The Engineers, BBC World Service

▶︎
NVLD: A Visual-Spatial Disorder

▶︎
How to Stop AI from Killing Your Critical Thinking | Advait Sarkar | TED

▶︎
LIVE: Conan O’Brien speaks at Harvard graduation ceremony (full)

▶︎
Developmental Language Disorder & Dyslexia

▶︎
Varied Ideas of Inclusion: Studying Parent and Teacher Perspectives

▶︎
'Listen Like You Might Be Wrong': Harvard Student Goes Viral For Stunning Speech On Trump Amid Feud

▶︎
Dysgraphia: More Than Just Messy Handwriting

▶︎
What kids know about motivation (and we don't) | Betsy Blackard | TEDxClaremontGraduateUniversity

▶︎
Conan O’Brien Delivers the Commencement Address | Harvard Commencement 2026

▶︎
