Does speed reading actually work?
The short answer: not the way it’s usually sold. Reading 1,000+ words a minute with full comprehension is a myth — speed and comprehension trade off, and the dramatic gains promised by classic speed-reading courses are really just skimming. But a more modest claim is supported: most people can read meaningfully faster than they do today, if they verify that their understanding holds while they speed up.
What does the research say about speed reading?
The most thorough review of the evidence is Rayner, Schotter, Masson, Potter, and Treiman’s “So Much to Read, So Little Time: How Do We Read, and Can Speed Reading Help?” (Psychological Science in the Public Interest, 2016). Its conclusions, in plain terms:
- Skilled adults read roughly 200–400 words per minute. That range reflects how language comprehension works, not a limitation of the eyes.
- Speed and comprehension trade off. Push the pace up and understanding goes down. Readers who report extreme speeds score poorly when comprehension is actually tested.
- “Reading” at 1,000+ wpm is skimming. Skimming is a genuinely useful skill — for triage, review, and finding what matters — but it is not reading with full understanding, and selling it as such is the speed-reading industry’s core dishonesty.
- The reliable way to read faster is to become a better reader — vocabulary, background knowledge, and practice — because reading speed is limited mostly by language processing, not eye movement.
So what does work?
Within those limits, several things genuinely help, and they are exactly what a good trainer should focus on:
- Reducing regressions. Untrained readers frequently jump back and re-read text out of habit rather than need. A pacer — a flashed word or a moving highlight — discourages reflexive re-reading, and that alone recovers real speed.
- Loosening subvocalization. Most of us read at the pace we learned to read aloud, sounding out every word in our heads. You can’t (and shouldn’t) eliminate inner speech, but a steady pacer teaches your eyes to run slightly ahead of it.
- Practicing at the edge. Like any training, improvement happens just past your comfortable pace — fast enough to stretch, slow enough that comprehension holds.
- Measuring comprehension. This is the part almost every speed-reading app skips. Without a comprehension check, “progress” is indistinguishable from progressively confident skimming.
What is RSVP, and does it help?
RSVP (rapid serial visual presentation) flashes one word at a time in a fixed position, often with the word’s optimal recognition point — the letter your eye would naturally land on — held in place. Because the text comes to your eyes, RSVP removes eye-movement and regression time entirely, which is why it feels startlingly fast.
The research caveat: at high rates, RSVP comprehension drops sharply, partly because you can’t regress when you genuinely need to, and working memory falls behind. RSVP is a useful training surface at honest speeds, not a magic trick at extreme ones. That’s why a trainer that uses RSVP must also measure comprehension — otherwise it’s only measuring tolerance for flashing words.
How Dogear applies the evidence
Dogear is a speed-reading trainer for iPhone built around the honest version of the claim:
- Every passage ends with a short comprehension quiz generated from that exact text, scored with explanations.
- Your headline metric is your comprehension-safe speed — the fastest pace at which you still scored at least 80% — not your raw maximum.
- It offers both RSVP (pivot-aligned, 100–900 wpm) and a calmer guided highlight over normal text, because pacing helps in both forms.
- Quizzes and fresh passages are generated by Apple’s on-device AI, so what you read never leaves your phone.
No “10× your reading speed.” A realistic outcome looks like this: if you read at 250 wpm today, training at the edge of your pace can plausibly take you to 350–450 wpm on familiar material with comprehension intact — and Dogear will show you the proof, passage by passage.
Train at the edge of your pace.
Download Dogear for iPhonePrimary source: Rayner, K., Schotter, E. R., Masson, M. E. J., Potter, M. C., & Treiman, R. (2016). “So Much to Read, So Little Time: How Do We Read, and Can Speed Reading Help?” Psychological Science in the Public Interest, 17(1), 4–34.