Do you believe our minds function this way?

Discussion in 'General Discussions' started by Bestower, Dec 24, 2008.

  1. Bestower

    Bestower Level I

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    Cna yuo raed tihs?
    Olny 55% of plepoe can.

    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?


    I think that this is very pausible and that our monds probably don't read the word but read the word as a whole as this study was supposed to prove. SO can you read it and if so do you find this to be plausible? (I sound like myth busters xD)

    Please don't double post - Commy
     
  2. sandman6

    sandman6 Level I

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    i believe the human mind csa function in more then one way when it comes to unscrambling letters since grade school we been learning how to spell 99.9% of the English language so when we see a scrambled lettering our mind tends to fix it and we can make out the word to pronounce these words
     
  3. Royal

    Royal Level IV

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    Anyone who is fluent in English can read that, not 55%, I've seen it a bunch. 99% of people can who know English. And yes its not hard.
     
  4. Fendi

    Fendi Level IV

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    I could read it all straight off except "rset" because obviously set is a word so my mind just read that and dropped the r =]
     
  5. Liwi

    Liwi Level II

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    I think it works most of the time, but sometimes if you order the letters in a word, it can be a bit confusing as to what it says. Although this is abusing the system, it doesn't always work >_>
     
  6. Epsilon5

    Epsilon5 Level I

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    Believe it or not, this is one of the principles upon which "Imperial Exam" is based. It's difficult because, Yes, we did read "aslo" as a word. We also read "wokring" as a word. It's all the same idea. Neopets just played on the fact that we humans take words as a whole when we read.

    Of course, if you think about it, everything we do becomes an aggregate of the smaller things that make it up. When we're little, we DO read letter-by-letter. When we're more experienced, it's word by word. When we're just learning to drive, we have to shift gears, remember when to use turn signals, think about using the gas pedal, the brake pedal, et cetera. When we're more experienced, we just get in the car and drive - our mind takes care of the rest. Learning to tie a shoe blah-blah then you can do it without thinking.

    All we can do is merely an aggregate of the smaller things we know how to do. Kinda nifty, if you ask me. :)
     
  7. Hally

    Hally Level IV

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    Everyone cites that thing as evidence that our minds can read words regardless of the order and crap. It's baloney. Look at that passage. They didnt really scramble up the letters, only the groups of letters.

    Let me redo it.


    I cdnuolt biveele taht I cluod alltcuay
    utednanrsd waht I was rdanieg. The paonmneahl
    pweor of the hmuan mnid, ainccdrog to
    rhcscereah at Cgabrdmie Uvtinerisy, it
    dseno't mtaetr in waht oerdr the ltteres
    in a wrod are, the olny inoptramt 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 bsaucee the huamn mnid deos not raed
    ervey lteter by istlef, but the wrod as a
    wlohe. Anzamig huh?

    harder, isn't it?
     
  8. KeKNoRRiS

    KeKNoRRiS Level III

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    I don't think it's harder :p The mind is just brilliant :p And even those who do not think english are able to read that, as I'm Dutch and I can read it. I do think you need to have a good basic English knowledge however.
     
  9. weldn

    weldn Level II

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    That's quite true :lol:
    I had my hard time playing imperial exam bacause of this phenomenon.

    But i guess for the Chinese version, the "algorithm" can be very distinct.
    We have to recognize whether the shape inside this Chinese letter reasonable or not,
    instead of reading the first & the last parts.
     
  10. Armin2008

    Armin2008 Newbie

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    I can't belive I can read that!, but reserach is research. Now I just need to know why the sky is blue...
     
  11. Epsilon5

    Epsilon5 Level I

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    According to Wikipedia, the sky is blue because of the following phenomenon:
     
  12. unskillful12

    unskillful12 Level III

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    On a side note, this is the same reason that your veins are blue (ITS NOT BECAUSE BLOOD IS BLUE WHEN IT CONTAINS NO OXYGEN...i hate when people say that)
     
  13. Epsilon5

    Epsilon5 Level I

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    Technically speaking, nothing is blue, or any color. It just absorbs all other wavelengths of visible light and appears to be a certain color. neat stuff. :)
     
  14. unskillful12

    unskillful12 Level III

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    Well if you define blue as the human mind's interpretation of a certain wavelength of electromagnetic radiation than blue is simply a certain wavelength (around 300nm) of radiation. Therefore calling something blue can imply that it emits that radiation... If you really wanna get bizarre and technical, you should talk about yellow...now yellow is messed up (and that's not sarcasm).
     
  15. SinkingThoughts

    SinkingThoughts Level I

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    HOLY CRAP o_O Dude, this topic and that passage is excellent xD And I highly doubt only 55% percent of English reading humans can understand that -_- But yeah, that's pretty interesting.

    an argument my old Chinese teacher once made against english speaking students was that english was a language of interpretation, whereas chinese is a language of representation. All of the Chinese characters represent something, whereas English words are just jumbles of the same letters that are assigned a certain meaning when they are placed in a certain order.
     
  16. krilas

    krilas Level II

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    I have read this somewhere before in the past. Yea it is interesting to know that our minds actually function that way. Still it might only work with words that you are familiar with or more commonly use, the fact that we might be able to comprehend the passage means that the words in the passage are already deeply inrooted in us, if say a word that we weren't familiar with appeared then the outcome would have been different.