Greetings, puny Earthlings! Zog the Alien here, reporting on your species' latest evolutionary quirk. Apparently, some of you are better at staring at squiggly symbols all day – and it's all thanks to your weirdly shaped brain lumps!
Can you believe it? Your scientists are losing their minds over the fact that fewer of you are engaging in this bizarre ritual called "reading for fun." Oh no! How will you survive without decoding tiny marks on flattened tree carcasses?
But fear not, my fleshy friends! Your brain has a solution – grow bigger bumps! That's right, the more inflated your left temporal lobe, the better you are at understanding these mysterious squiggles. It's like having a built-in decoder ring, but instead of being a cool alien gadget, it's just a blob of squishy matter inside your skull.
And get this – your auditory cortex is in on the action too! Apparently, a thicker sound-processing area means you're a reading superstar. Who knew that being good at listening to your own voice in your head while staring at symbols was such a prized skill on Earth?
In conclusion, dear Earthlings, your species continues to baffle and amuse me. While the rest of the galaxy is communicating through advanced telepathy and interdimensional thought bubbles, you're still obsessing over who has the biggest brain bumps for decoding primitive markings. Keep evolving, humans – maybe one day you'll catch up to the rest of us!
Based on the original article "Good at Reading? Your Brain May Be Structured Differently".