Grammar police You’re unpopular
If you’re always correcting grammar this new study could give you insights into your personality.
If you’re always correcting grammar this new study could give you insights into your personality.
Are you a member of the grammar police, or willing to let a few typos slide It turns out your reaction to written grammatical and spelling errors may say something about your personality. According to a study recently published in the journal PLOS ONE, negative reactions to written errors may be linked to more introverted, or less agreeable, personality types. Neutral reactions to written errors, meanwhile, may be linked to more extraverted personalities. Gizmodo reports that researchers at the University of Michigan presented 83 participants with an email that contained grammar errors, spelling mistakes, or no mistakes at all. Participants took a personality test, read the email, and then assessed the anonymous email writer on qualities like “perceived intelligence” and “friendliness.”
The email read: “Hey! My name is Pat and I’m interested in sharing a house with other students who are serious abuot (about) there (their) schoolwork but who also know how to relax and have fun. I like to play tennis and love old school rap. If your (you’re) someone who likes that kind of thing too, maybe we would mkae (make) good housemates.”
Researchers found that extroverted participants were the most likely to overlook both grammatical and spelling errors, and that those errors had little impact on their assessment of the anonymous email writer. Less agreeable people, meanwhile, were more sensitive to grammatical errors, while more conscientious and less open people were sensitive to spelling mistakes. Though it’s unclear why less agreeable people judged grammar most harshly, while introverted people were more bothered by typos, researchers believe it may have to do with the different causes of so-called ‘grammos’ and “typos.” While typos (‘teh’ instead of ‘the’) are often keyboard mistakes, grammos (‘they’re’ instead of “there”) may imply a misunderstanding of the rules of grammar. “The attributions associated with grammos are more personalised and may thus be more likely to impact other unrelated assessments of the writer, compared with the more neutral attributions associated with typos,” the study’s authors explain.
If that’s the case, it’s possible participants who were bothered by grammar may have made more assumptions about the writer’s personality, while those who were sensitive to typos may have simply been annoyed with the writer’s carelessness. However, more research is needed to clarify the connections between personality and sensitivity to written errors. While the study implies such a connection exists, it’s impossible to draw too many conclusions based solely on an 83 participant study focused on a single sample email.