Eszter's Blog         // via eszter.com //
esztersblog.com

« Eszter.com »              « E-LIST »              « Research »              « Gallery »

Welcome to Eszter's Weblog Here you will find my thoughts and comments about all sorts of things from sociology, the Internet, academia, teaching, research, books and movies to current events, fun Web stuff, art, gadgets and just about anything else that comes to mind. If the inspiration strikes you during your visit, feel free to leave a note via the comments link.

[Previous entry: "And where were you educated?"] [Main Index] [Next entry: "Women politicians"]

"Some consequences of bad spelling"
02/10/2004 Entry

[See this entry - including comments - at Crooked Timber.]

Last week, the New York Times had a piece about the potential monetary losses resulting from bad spelling. The author discusses how some misspelled auction items on eBay sell for very little because few bidders find them.

Reading about the frequency of spelling mistakes on the Web was no shock to me. In fact, the geek that I am, I even ran analyses [pdf] in my dissertation to see what explains whether and how often people misspell words during their online actions.

I should take a step back and explain my project. I study people’s Web-use skills. For my dissertation project, I collected data on one hundred Internet users’ online abilities. Participants were a random sample of the Mercer County (NJ) Internet population. Although these people are more educated and come from families with higher income than the average American Internet user, the sample was likely representative of the county’s Net users. (I say “likely” because it is practically impossible to know for sure, but I did as much background research as possible to establish that this is highly likely.. see my dissertation (or contact me) for more on that.)

I asked people to come to a university research setting and perform tasks online. I asked them to look for various things (political candidate information, tax forms, local events, etc.) and recorded everything they did. Many of them made spelling mistakes. This certainly slowed people down, and in some cases it also meant that they were unable to complete certain tasks.

No one asked, but since I had the data, I figured I’d look to see what explains why some people make spelling mistakes and how often. I found [pdf] that those with less education were more likely to make spelling mistakes. However, the effect of education seemed to be mediated by computer use at work and experience with the Web. Regarding number of spelling mistakes, age also seemed to matter (older people made more mistakes), but again, computer use at work and experience with the Web mediated this effect. Explaining differences in typographical errors was a bit more interesting, but I’ll leave it to you to check that out on the tables. (I included a table with information about participants’ demographics in that file in case that’s of interest.)

In a forthcoming paper, I list some more examples of common mistakes people make online such as spaces in URLs, no spaces in multiple-term search queries, and mistaken top-level domain-name extensions. More importantly, I describe the classification and coding scheme I used for coding people’s online actions. Send me a note if you’d like a copy.

As for attempts by Google and others to highlight to people that they are making a spelling mistake, it’s useful to some but not to others. My experience observing dozens of average users was that many people don’t see such hints and because results show up even in response to misspelled queries people do not realize they made a mistake and proceed.. often not to the best of sources.


Powered By Greymatter


February 2004
SMTWTFS
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
29      


Links of Interest

How to win the Nobel Prize
Click for Mammogram
Play "Match That Blogger"
Blogathon 03 Archives


Recent entries

» Extending Internet access to low-income communities
» Shattered
» The story behind red alert
» Weekend trivia
» Would you cut up a book?
» Pizza, cholesterol check, the works
» Welcome
» A different kind of road trip
» Allowing comments on blogs
» Paddling for bandwidth
» The right to a soda.. at any price
» Online communities
» Silly.. but we all do it
» Paris notes
» New book on Social Inequality


Previous entries

May, 2002 - July, 2003


Blogger info

Eszter Hargittai
Communication Studies Department
Northwestern University
Evanston, Illinois 60208
blog at eszter dot com




Blogs I Visit





The small print

A few words on what I will and will not post on this blog (taken from my E-LIST entry of January 2, 2002). I have nothing against posting commercial sites as long as they come highly recommended. In fact, I'm quite interested in improving informed consumer choice so I'm very curious to hear about good experiences with online retailers. What I will refrain from posting are sites that require plug-ins or programs that are painful to deal with. Example: I will not post anything that only works with RealOne/RealPlayer as that program is intrusive and annoying beyond belief and I am not willing to reinstall it on my machine (it was hard enough to get rid of it completely in the first place) nor do I want to encourage others to have it. If your site has audio content, please make it available in multiple formats or choose one that can be run on multiple players (e.g. .avi).


Feel free to link
to my Weblog

with or without
this graphic button.


http://www.esztersblog.com


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.