Alphabet effect

id: alphabet-effect-196-10640015
title: Alphabet effect
text: The alphabet effect is a group of hypotheses in communication theory arguing that phonetic writing, and alphabetic scripts in particular, have served to promote and encourage the cognitive skills of abstraction, analysis, coding, decoding, and classification. Promoters of these hypotheses are associated with the Toronto School of Communication, such as Marshall McLuhan, Harold Innis, Walter Ong, Vilém Flusser and more recently Robert K. Logan; the term "alphabet effect" comes from Logan's 1986 w
brand slug: wiki
category slug: encyclopedia
description:
original url: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alphabet_effect
date created:
date modified: 2024-03-27T10:12:39Z
main entity: {"identifier":"Q4735202","url":"https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q4735202"}
image:
fields total: 13
integrity: 13

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