The modern world is dominated by videos, animations, and quick visual content. Tt may come as a surprise that reading often helps us remember more. Yet countless studies — and our own everyday experience — show that when we read, we retain information more deeply and for much longer than when we simply watch a video or scroll past visuals.

For Interpreters and Translators, reading forms an integral part of organising, planning and preparing for your assignments. In fact, your briefing and meeting documents will make or break your output.

Its getting harder and harder to read. When content is bulky and technical, it’s even less accessible.

You can start now to train your brain to love reading. Here’s why reading remains the most powerful tool for long-term memory and true understanding.

“No matter how busy you may think you are, you must find time for reading, or surrender yourself to self-chosen ignorance.” 

Reading Forces the Brain to Actively Engage

Video is passive.
Reading is active.

When you read, your brain must:

  • Decode symbols (letters and words)

  • Build meaning

  • Visualise ideas

  • Connect new information to what you already know

This active cognitive processing strengthens memory traces. Watching visuals, on the other hand, allows your brain to relax — which is great for entertainment, but not for deep learning.


Reading Happens at Your Pace

A huge advantage of reading is control.
You can slow down, pause, reread, underline, or take notes.

With video:

  • The pace is fixed

  • Information can rush past

  • You may miss key details

  • It’s harder to stop and reflect without disrupting the flow

The ability to pause mentally while reading allows your brain to organise and store information more efficiently.


Reading Encourages Mental Visualization

When you read, you create your own mental images.
This process — called imagery generation — strengthens comprehension and memory because you’re not just receiving information; you’re constructing it.

With visuals, the images are already provided. There’s less mental effort, and therefore weaker encoding into memory.


Reading Allows Deeper Focus (Fewer Distractions)

Modern videos often include:

  • rapid scene changes

  • background music

  • captions

  • animations

  • distracting visuals

These stimulate the brain but can overload your working memory.

Reading, especially on paper or a distraction-free device, allows for deep focus, the ideal state for transferring information from short-term to long-term memory.


Reading Improves Logical Processing and Critical Thinking

Because reading is linear, it trains the brain to follow concepts in sequence, build arguments, and evaluate ideas. This boosts retention and understanding.

Visual content often prioritizes:

  • speed

  • entertainment

  • emotional impact

This makes it engaging, but not necessarily memorable or mentally enriching.


Reading Builds Stronger Neural Connections

The act of reading activates multiple areas of the brain at once:

  • language centres

  • memory networks

  • sensory imagination areas

  • executive function regions

This creates stronger neural pathways, meaning the information stays with you longer.

Watching visual content activates fewer networks, especially if the content is easy or passive.


Reading Encourages Reflection — the Key to Memory

Memory improves when we:

  • pause

  • reflect

  • summarise

  • relate new information to existing knowledge

Reading naturally encourages these reflective moments. Visual content moves quickly, giving you little time to think.

Reflection strengthens long-term retention — and reading gives your brain space to do it.


Reading Reduces Cognitive Load

Videos require the brain to process:

  • motion

  • audio

  • text

  • visual details

  • environment changes

This can overwhelm working memory.

Reading presents information in a simpler, linear form that the brain can process more efficiently, freeing up space for true comprehension.


So, Should We Ditch the Visuals? Not at All.

Visual learning has its strengths:

  • great for demonstrations

  • helpful for beginners

  • engaging for quick overviews

But when the goal is deep understanding, long-term retention, and the ability to recall information accurately, reading is far superior.

If you want information to stick, pick up a book, article, or reading device — your brain will thank you for it.

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