Constantly pointing out grammar and spelling errors makes you an asshole scientist find

Wyatt earp

Diamond Member
Apr 21, 2012
69,975
16,395
Any one could figure that out by the spelling police, they have no retort to a topic when they resort to that..... which is 99% of the time.....


Constantly Pointing Out Grammar Mistakes Makes You An Assh*le, Scientists Find


The study discovered that folks who are irritated by grammatical errors on the Internet tend to have “less agreeable” personalities when compared to people who just let it go. Further psychological testing on these subjects revealed that not only are they less agreeable, they’re less open on a general level and are more likely to judge you for flaws and errors.

All of this sounds kind of obvious as you read through it, but this is the first instance of researchers being able to actually prove that personality traits influence how people react to typos and grammatical errors; and furthermore, it provides a bit of insight on the communications and miscommunications of the Internet.

“In this experiment, we examined the social judgments that readers made about the writers,” sayslead researcher Julie Boland, of the University of Michigan.

The study had 83 subjects read responses to an online ad searching for a housemate. The responses they read either had no grammatical errors, or had been made to look like many grammatical errors were made, being doctored with typos (letters being mixed around) or improper use of words, like too/to or it’s/its.

These 83 people were then asked to judge the person who wrote the response they’d received in terms of intelligence, friendliness and various other things, like how good of a housemate they would be. At the end of the experiment, participants were asked if they’d noticed any grammatical errors or typos in the emails they read, and how much (if at all) it bothered them.

Then, the 83 participants completed aBig Five personality test that revealed how they rate in terms of openness, agreeableness, extraversion/introversion, neuroticism, and conscientiousness, as well as collected general information like age, background and any pre-conceived attitudes they had regarding language.

As one could imagine, the email responses that were riddled with typos and grammatical errors were rated as worse than the ones that had perfect conventional grammar. However, they also found that certain personality types were harsher in their judgments about the authors of the typo-filled responses.

Extroverted people were the most likely to not care about grammatical errors, while introverts were more likely to view the author in a negative light. People with conscientious, but less open personalities were sensitive to typos, and people with “less agreeable” personalities were upset the most by conventional errors.


 
Your title should say either "scientists find" or "scientist finds." There should also be a comma after "asshole."







:lol:
 
I try to restrict it to the times people misspell words while attacking the intelligence of others.

"Your an idiot" being my personal favorite.
.
 
Sometimes it behooves the one making the error to welcome correction, so as not to make the same mistake next time...
upload_2016-12-29_16-23-55.png



just sayin....
 
Any one could figure that out by the spelling police, they have no retort to a topic when they resort to that..... which is 99% of the time.....


Constantly Pointing Out Grammar Mistakes Makes You An Assh*le, Scientists Find


The study discovered that folks who are irritated by grammatical errors on the Internet tend to have “less agreeable” personalities when compared to people who just let it go. Further psychological testing on these subjects revealed that not only are they less agreeable, they’re less open on a general level and are more likely to judge you for flaws and errors.

All of this sounds kind of obvious as you read through it, but this is the first instance of researchers being able to actually prove that personality traits influence how people react to typos and grammatical errors; and furthermore, it provides a bit of insight on the communications and miscommunications of the Internet.

“In this experiment, we examined the social judgments that readers made about the writers,” sayslead researcher Julie Boland, of the University of Michigan.

The study had 83 subjects read responses to an online ad searching for a housemate. The responses they read either had no grammatical errors, or had been made to look like many grammatical errors were made, being doctored with typos (letters being mixed around) or improper use of words, like too/to or it’s/its.

These 83 people were then asked to judge the person who wrote the response they’d received in terms of intelligence, friendliness and various other things, like how good of a housemate they would be. At the end of the experiment, participants were asked if they’d noticed any grammatical errors or typos in the emails they read, and how much (if at all) it bothered them.

Then, the 83 participants completed aBig Five personality test that revealed how they rate in terms of openness, agreeableness, extraversion/introversion, neuroticism, and conscientiousness, as well as collected general information like age, background and any pre-conceived attitudes they had regarding language.

As one could imagine, the email responses that were riddled with typos and grammatical errors were rated as worse than the ones that had perfect conventional grammar. However, they also found that certain personality types were harsher in their judgments about the authors of the typo-filled responses.

Extroverted people were the most likely to not care about grammatical errors, while introverts were more likely to view the author in a negative light. People with conscientious, but less open personalities were sensitive to typos, and people with “less agreeable” personalities were upset the most by conventional errors.


[/QUOTE

Of course it does. Which is why I tend to use it when screwing with pretentious liberals.
 
As a writer I notice almost every mistake, but I generally don't point them out unless I'm feeling snotty.

Though I don't fit their psych profile at all. I'm generally an extrovert, I'm almost too open for folks, and I happen to get along with almost everyone who gets to know me. Of course, my brain is wired different so that automatically precludes me from such polls and studies :(
 
As a writer I notice almost every mistake, but I generally don't point them out unless I'm feeling snotty.

Though I don't fit their psych profile at all. I'm generally an extrovert, I'm almost too open for folks, and I happen to get along with almost everyone who gets to know me. Of course, my brain is wired different so that automatically precludes me from such polls and studies :(

Agree. I overlook a lot, intentionally. And it ain't easy as you know. I'm the son of two proofreaders and that stuff just jumps off the page and screams "HEY! LOOK AT ME! CLEANUP ON AISLE SIX!".

What gets me is the stupidity of those who get told, and then go right on doing it. That, and using apostrophes to form plurals :death: .
 
Any one could figure that out by the spelling police, they have no retort to a topic when they resort to that..... which is 99% of the time.....


Constantly Pointing Out Grammar Mistakes Makes You An Assh*le, Scientists Find


The study discovered that folks who are irritated by grammatical errors on the Internet tend to have “less agreeable” personalities when compared to people who just let it go. Further psychological testing on these subjects revealed that not only are they less agreeable, they’re less open on a general level and are more likely to judge you for flaws and errors.

All of this sounds kind of obvious as you read through it, but this is the first instance of researchers being able to actually prove that personality traits influence how people react to typos and grammatical errors; and furthermore, it provides a bit of insight on the communications and miscommunications of the Internet.

“In this experiment, we examined the social judgments that readers made about the writers,” sayslead researcher Julie Boland, of the University of Michigan.

The study had 83 subjects read responses to an online ad searching for a housemate. The responses they read either had no grammatical errors, or had been made to look like many grammatical errors were made, being doctored with typos (letters being mixed around) or improper use of words, like too/to or it’s/its.

These 83 people were then asked to judge the person who wrote the response they’d received in terms of intelligence, friendliness and various other things, like how good of a housemate they would be. At the end of the experiment, participants were asked if they’d noticed any grammatical errors or typos in the emails they read, and how much (if at all) it bothered them.

Then, the 83 participants completed aBig Five personality test that revealed how they rate in terms of openness, agreeableness, extraversion/introversion, neuroticism, and conscientiousness, as well as collected general information like age, background and any pre-conceived attitudes they had regarding language.

As one could imagine, the email responses that were riddled with typos and grammatical errors were rated as worse than the ones that had perfect conventional grammar. However, they also found that certain personality types were harsher in their judgments about the authors of the typo-filled responses.

Extroverted people were the most likely to not care about grammatical errors, while introverts were more likely to view the author in a negative light. People with conscientious, but less open personalities were sensitive to typos, and people with “less agreeable” personalities were upset the most by conventional errors.


[/QUOTE

Of course it does. Which is why I tend to use it when screwing with pretentious liberals.

And then there are those who can't manage the quote nest....
 
I only correct grammar when someone is insulting another, especially calling them an idiot. Then they deserve it. My favorite is "your an idiot"....
 

Forum List

Back
Top