Wednesday, July 3, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Why do we miss typos in own writings

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 Aug, 2014 12:28 PM
    A typo creeps into your work and your entire writing effort goes for a toss. Despite our best effort, why do we miss typos?
     
    If we hear experts, the reason typos get through is not because we are stupid or careless, it is because what we are doing is actually very smart.
     
    “When you are writing, you are trying to convey meaning. It is a very high-level task,” explained psychologist Tom Stafford from University of Sheffield in Britain.
     
    As with all high-level tasks, your brain generalises simple, component parts (like turning letters into words and words into sentences) so it can focus on more complex tasks (like combining sentences into complex ideas).
     
    “We do not catch every detail, we are not like computers or NSA databases,” Stafford added.
     
    According to him, when we are proof reading our own work, we know the meaning we want to convey.
     
    Because we expect that meaning to be there, it is easier for us to miss when parts (or all) of it are absent.
     
    “The reason we do not see our own typos is because what we see on the screen is competing with the version that exists in our heads,” Stafford told wired.com.
     
    If you want to catch your own errors, you should try to make your work as unfamiliar as possible.
     
    Change the font or background colour or print it out and edit by hand, he suggested.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Euthanasia: Debate rekindled on right to die for the terminally ill

    Euthanasia: Debate rekindled on right to die for the terminally ill
    Three years ago, the Supreme Court ruled against 'active euthanasia', administering a lethal injection to end lives of patients with terminal illness, but said that 'passive...

    Euthanasia: Debate rekindled on right to die for the terminally ill

    Companion planets can host life better

    Companion planets can host life better
    Having a companion in old-age is good for people and, it turns out, might extend the chance for life on certain earth-sized planets as well....

    Companion planets can host life better

    Penguin's language decoded

    Penguin's language decoded
    In a significant breakthrough, Italian researchers have decoded the language of penguins....

    Penguin's language decoded

    Man builds spaceship in his kid's bedroom!

    Man builds spaceship in his kid's bedroom!
    Have you ever thought of building a spacecraft for your kid? Learn from this man who gifted his four-year-old son a NASA spaceship simulator - right in his bedroom...

    Man builds spaceship in his kid's bedroom!

    DNA may shape political affiliations

    DNA may shape political affiliations
    The extent of liberalism in people may be linked to their bodies and deep seated psychology and not just results of conscious decision-making...

    DNA may shape political affiliations

    Lead in teeth as kid can reveal origin later

    Lead in teeth as kid can reveal origin later
    The lead that gets accumulated in children's teeth as they inhale dust and ingest soil when they put their hands in their mouths can later reveal where they come from, reveals a study....

    Lead in teeth as kid can reveal origin later