Abbrvatd SMS tks too lng to undrstnd
Melbourne: Going through a heavily abbreviated SMS can take twice as long time and only saves the sender a few seconds of typing, says a new research. The study led by University of Tasmania psychology lecturer Dr Nenagh Kemp has shown that many common abbreviations were hard to be deciphered or was misinterpreted. She asked students to write as many abbreviations as possible in five minutes and then read a series of shortened messages.
The most common abbreviations were the easily understood 2, 4, c and u, while the difficult ones included ttyl (talk to you later), bbs (be back soon), pu (pick up) and cn (seeing you soon).
“Though it was quicker to write a message with abbreviations than conventional English, it took twice as long to read and many students made interpretation errors,” Kemp said. “These were second and third year students who use textisms all the time,” she added.
The study also showed that most people were inconsistent with their use of abbreviations, forgetting to shorten words. Moreover, it was increasingly used in formal documents. “People think they have to replace a “to” with a “2”, even though it takes just as long,” Kemp said.
The researchers suggest texters should limit their abbreviation use to friends. “People can pretty much understand these messages within their own community of friends because they develop a repertoire of abbreviations,” Kemp added. AGENCIES
About Me
Blog Archive
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment