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read
(redirected from reading thoughts)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Legal, Idioms, Wikipedia 0.03 sec.

read

To input into the computer from a peripheral device (keyboard, mouse, disk, tape, etc.). Like reading a book or playing an audio cassette or videotape, reading does not destroy what is being read. The term also refers to accessing memory.

Read Out and Write Into
Every transfer of data is a "read out" from some place and a "write into" some other place. Reading a disk means output from the disk drive and input to the computer (write to memory). When data are copied from one memory area to another, the data are "read out" of memory and "written into" memory. See write.


read [rēd]
(computer science)
To acquire information, usually from some form of storage in a computer.
To convert magnetic spots, characters, or punched holes into electrical impulses.
(electronics)
To generate an output corresponding to the pattern stored in a charge storage tube.


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Summers further insists that reading thoughts is "an impossibility.
But even today, irrespective of such diagnostic advances as CT, MRI, PET, blood flow analyses, glucose and oxygen uptake, and so on, reading thoughts or "mind reading" remains an impossibility; cerebral electrical patterns aren't thoughts but instead manifestations of cerebral physiologic (electrical) dynamics that may occur while a subject thinks but can't be extrapolated beyond configurations and frequencies.
 
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