Scientists Explain Why Humans Are So Good At Reading Scrambled Letters



You’ve probably seen it — a paragraph that looks totally mangled, yet somehow you’re able to read it correctly. “Cna yuo raed tihs?” Those scrambled letters shouldn’t make sense, but your brain doesn’t seem to notice. This oddly satisfying phenomenon is called “typoglycemia” — a viral sensation online where jumbled letters are still coherent. According to science, there’s a good reason for humans being able to process them. “Aoccdrnig to rseearch at Cmabridge Uinervtisy, it deos not mttaer in what oredr the ltteers in a wrod are, the olny iprmoatnt tihng is taht the frist and lsat ltteer be in the rghit pclae.” That means as long as the first and last letter of the word are in the correct spot, you can still comprehend the word. What influences the challenge is the pattern of the word, which our minds are always scanning for. Rather than decoding every single letter, we look for familiar shapes and, even more so, the context of the sentence. Our brains are designed to predict what's likely to come next, and then check those predictions against the visual input, which can explain why we so often miss typos in our own writing. We don’t see what’s actually on the page; we see what we expect to be there. Even when letters are out of order, enough of the structure remains for the brain to make an educated guess. Basically, our minds are built to make sense of a little chaos, but not total abolishment.