End of a season
End of a season ~ Cyanotype
American Robin
Untitled
Winter
Basking in the sun
Watching sunlight
Arrival of the Birds
Before day break
Rain
$1.95 / Mt.,
Roses
Burning midnight oil
Canadian Punjabi samosa
Leaf ~ an epic
River
Watching sunlight
^ ^
Cherry tomato
Winter Scene *
Trees in the mist
Early Spring
In a world of his own
In the wind
Watching sunlight
Men before mirror *
Happy summer
Untitled
Spring miscellanea
Portrait of a forest
The Road
Waching the sunlight
Babies and the brain evolution
Watching sunlight
Watching sunlight
Maugham
While Eating a Pear ~ Billy Collins
Watching sunlight
Sunshine after the rain and a wet bird
Before the Breakfast
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- Photo replaced on 22 Aug 2014
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this photo by Dinesh


To see why, consider the human kind we call dyslexic. At the psychological and social level of analysis, dyslexics are the real human kind; they’re schoolchildren (and adults) who don’t perceive words as most people do. The condition was first described at the end of nineteenth century as a form of “word blindness.” Today’s view is that dyslexic is a consequence of the way brain interpret phonemes, the chunks of sound that are building blocks of words.
Dyslexia, like almost all traits, must result from interactions among many different genes. Nonetheless, one need not know which genes in order to figure out how important heredity is to the condition. Research began in the 1950s, with comparisons of fraternal and identical twins and more recent statistical studies suggest that part of what makes dyslexia happens is a consequence of inheritance. ~ Page 292
Dyslexia, like almost all traits, must result from interactions among many different genes. Nonetheless, one need not know which genes in order to figure out how important heredity is to the condition. Research began in the 1950s, with comparisons of fraternal and identical twins and more recent statistical studies suggest that part of what makes dyslexia happens is a consequence of inheritance. ~ Page 292
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