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#238430 04/17/09 10:02 AM
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Hack from Nowheresville
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Hack from Nowheresville
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I was sent this in a email you may have seen it.

fi yuo cna


raed tihs, yuo hvae a sgtrane mnid too

Cna yuo raed tihs? Olny
55 out of 100 cna

i cdnuolt blveiee taht I cluod
aulaclty uesdnatnrd waht
I was rdanieg. The phaonmneal pweor of the
hmuan mnid, aoccdrnig to a rscheearch
at Cmabrigde Uinervtisy, it
dseno't mtaetr in waht oerdr the ltteres in a wrod
are, the olny
iproamtnt tihng is taht the frsit and lsat ltteer be in the rghit

pclae. The rset can be a taotl mses and you can sitll raed it whotuit
a pboerlm.
Tihs is bcuseae the huamn mnid deos not raed ervey lteter
by istlef, but the
wrod as a wlohe. Azanmig huh? yaeh and I awlyas
tghuhot slpeling was ipmorantt!


Thanks for the love
Thanks for the guidance
Thanks for the TARTAN PRIDE HA!

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#238431 04/17/09 11:36 AM
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B
Hack from Nowheresville
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B
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I could read it, but context helped a lot - it's very easy to predict words when one knows the context. And it was harder/slower than normal. So yes, spelling still *is* important. wink

Plus, this doesn't work for lots of closely spelled words - where rearranging the order changes the word. Then, only context will tell you what it is.

Bethy


I don't suffer from insanity...I enjoy every minute of it.
#238432 04/17/09 05:45 PM
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Features Writer
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I cuold raed ti oot lol!!


I will and always be a big fan of Lois and Clark forever and forever.
#238433 04/18/09 03:57 AM
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Top Banana
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I could read it, too.

In fact, I could read it so effortlessly, I was very surprised by the 55 out of 100 statistic. huh


"Hold on, my friends, to the Constitution and to the Republic for which it stands. Miracles do not cluster and what has happened once in 6,000 years, may not happen again. Hold on to the Constitution" - Daniel Webster
#238434 04/18/09 04:31 AM
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Quote
I was very surprised by the 55 out of 100 statistic.
I suspect the author is telling porkies. I can't imagine that many people will have difficulty reading this. It's more like a party trick, than an actual scientific example, imo.

LabRat smile



Athos: If you'd told us what you were doing, we might have been able to plan this properly.
Aramis: Yes, sorry.
Athos: No, no, by all means, let's keep things suicidal.


The Musketeers
#238435 04/18/09 03:22 PM
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People who know how to read--that is, people who use small phonetic samplings to predict the author's meaning--have no trouble reading it because the context enables us to predict what the next word should be.

However, many people who presumably "can read" are unable to figure it out because they don't actually read. They identify individual words without context over and over until they finally remember enough of the words in a row to figure out what is being said. For those people, the example above is impossible to read. It's nothing more than a very long "jumble," the puzzle that got pulled for Arianna Carlin's column. An astonishing number of people have this kind of reading problem. They're the ones who can read a passage out loud quite well but have no idea what it said when they're done. In order to understand any written material, they have to read it repeatedly.

I've just spent the past semester training to teach those students how to read. The results are staggering, but the process uses a different model for reading: not teaching word identification but predictive strategies instead.


Sheila Harper
Hopeless fan of a timeless love story

http://www.sheilaharper.com/
#238436 04/24/09 02:49 AM
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Hack from Nowheresville
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I recieved that message in spanish also, I could read it as easily as this one.

I agree, if you know the context it helps a lot.

Quote
They're the ones who can read a passage out loud quite well but have no idea what it said when they're done.
I've noticed that sometimes I had that problem at school, especially while reading in english or italian, not being any of those languages my mother tongue. I knew what the text I read outloud was about but didn't quite understand it deeply, for details I had to re-read it.

I always thought it was because I was more focused in pronouncing well the words.

Carolyn smile


Pisco and Ceviche ->100% PERUVIAN. Never doubt that.
#238437 04/24/09 12:12 PM
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Pulitzer
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This story is actually an urban myth - even though most people can manage to work out the words, misspelled though they are. This version has a 'misspelled' word from the original: if the first and last letters are supposed to be in the correct order, why is 'can' spelt 'cna'?

See the Snopes story

here .


Just a fly-by! *waves*
#238438 04/24/09 03:50 PM
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I noticed another misspelling, too: "a rscheearch" implies "a researcher," since "research" isn't a countable noun--at least, not in the US. Researcher should have 3 "r"s, not 2 "ch"s..


Sheila Harper
Hopeless fan of a timeless love story

http://www.sheilaharper.com/
#238439 04/24/09 07:19 PM
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I saw that too, Sheila (and it's in the original email as cited on Snopes, as opposed to the cna/can I pointed to). To me, 'a research' screams ESL-speaker, as in my experience - and I work with ESL speakers all the time nowadays - many ESL speakers tend to believe that 'research' can be treated as a countable noun. I've seen 'a research' and also 'researches'.

English is indeed a very difficult language to learn as an adult. frown


Wendy


Just a fly-by! *waves*
#238440 04/27/09 06:39 AM
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Kerth
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Well, I have different reading modes. One mode where I read over all mistakes (which I have to turn on consciously). This also includes bad grammar which is why I didn't mind 'a research' in this special case.

In one of my other modes - which I'm constantly in - I notice almost all mistakes, ranging from spelling over grammar to lexical mistakes and so forth. Comes in pretty handy when doing a beta. smile


The only known quantity that moves faster than
light is the office grapevine. (from Nan's fabulous Home series)
#238441 02/14/10 05:25 AM
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I was able to breeze right through it as well. That was very interesting!


Too Old To STOP Being A Superman & Lois Lane Fan.
#238442 02/14/10 06:37 AM
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Kerth
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82.735% of the statistics you see on line are invented.


Marcus L. Rowland
Forgotten Futures, The Scientific Romance Role Playing Game
#238443 02/15/10 05:16 PM
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Pulitzer
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Quote
82.735% of the statistics you see on line are invented.
clap Tee-hee! clap

#238444 02/15/10 05:19 PM
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Quote
by Wendymr:
English is indeed a very difficult language to learn as an adult.
Somewhat related - I have read guidebooks, etc., about Chinese tourist attractions where the text was obviously translated from Chinese to English. I've seen some very strange constructions and mis-use of verbs, along with every other grammatical error one could make. I wonder if it is because European languages tend to have a similar structure, but Chinese, being logographic, has a totally different underpinning?

#238445 02/15/10 05:20 PM
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So that would make this the third kind of lie, right?


This *is* my happily ever after.
#238446 02/19/10 10:30 AM
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Kerth
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Quote
Originally posted by Marcus Rowland:
82.735% of the statistics you see on line are invented.
I've once seen this signature in a forum:
Quote
87.5% of all statistics are made up on the spot. If you're one of the 42% of statistics that doesn't, copy and paste this into your sig. In addition, 126.324% of the previous statement does not make sense.


The only known quantity that moves faster than
light is the office grapevine. (from Nan's fabulous Home series)

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