I think it's impractical to expect to reach a level that the "naturals" have, but you CAN train to speedread. I think "not liking to read books" will affect your progress, though. Let's face it, no matter how nice the program you ordered is, the bottom line is, to learn to speed-read, you'll have to read - a lot. And printed books are just nicer on your eyes.
The brain uses something called "chunking" as part of many of its activities. This includes remembering phone numbers (you know how annoying it is when someone has bad phone number tempo on a voice message).
Reading is the same thing. When you're first learning to read, you process letters one at a time, because you're not used to the holistic aspect of recognizing words. Eventually, your eyes move from word to word and learn to recognize them right away, without having to check the letter sequence.
You can raed tihs setcenne, eevn touhgh it's gibebrsih.
You can take any text and scramble the letters within the words. If the first and last character are in their original position, you can read it almost as fast as if it were correct. I think extending this idea is what speedreaders do. They can see bigger chunks. Entire sentences, and often, entire paragraphs.
Let us know how it works out!
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