The Forgetfulcy Postion Entry
The most interesting thing I read in class this week was in Joyce L. Carter's "Argument in Hypertext: Writing Strategies and the Problem of Order in a Nonsequential World." It was about the recency effect , which refers to the phenomenon where the last thing a reader encounters is the most memorable. She wrote that "the writer might exploit the recency effect, anticipating that any node may become a conclusion for users who decide to call it quits at that spot. Stylistically, each node must sound like a conclusion." She then gave an example of a writer who "repeated key claims in every node... so that no matter which path readers took, they would see the claims repeated in various forms." That reinforced the idea that each aspect of my digital poster needs to convey the point I am trying to make, in case the reader decides to stop reading. Image credit: https://thedecisionlab.com/biases/serial-position-effect Image is of a hand-drawn graph labeled Se...