Here’s an interesting experiment
to try. Get a friend. Think of a song (one that you would
reasonably expect your friend to know as well). Tap along with your finger while you play the song to yourself in your
head. Now ask your friend what song you
were taping out.
It turns out that the taper’s
estimate of how easy it will be for someone to guess what song they are tapping
is vastly greater than the success their friend will have in actually coming up
with the correct song. The taper
believes they are conveying much more information than they really are. (Apologies for not being able to find the
actual study reference I was looking for – I couldn’t find it on Google Scholar
and I’ve long since thrown out the psychology textbook I had that referenced
the study.)
There’s an important lesson
in this experiment. Often times we’re in
a position where we have an idea, thought, emotion, etc. that we are trying to get
across to someone else. As humans its
our nature to overestimate the ease with which other people can understand the
information we are trying to convey. What
we may feel is very clear – tapping our finger to a song that we think is very
obvious – may in fact be completely obscured to the people we are trying to
convey this information to.
Love it! I know what you mean!
Posted by: walker | February 23, 2005 at 12:56 PM
Seth - I'm apalled that you would throw out your psych text book, especially when textbooks contain such important information presented in an easily accessible manner!
In all seriousness, this is a great example of the fascinating applications of psychology every day. It gets really interesting when you combine the age old psych concepts with modern day neuroscience.
Posted by: Ben Casnocha | February 25, 2005 at 07:58 PM
Hi Seth,
Just wondering if you've ever had a chance to look at NLP and representational systems.
In particular one of the core tenets of NLP is 'the map is not the territory' i.e. every person has a unique map of the world (worldview) and this is not the actual world.
so effective communication has to be in your audience's worldview/ their map/representational system.
Posted by: abhi | May 25, 2005 at 01:31 PM
Seth,
This looks like it was made for you:
http://www.downloadsquad.com/2005/12/28/the-song-tapper/
:-)
-c
Posted by: Charlie Wood | December 28, 2005 at 07:52 AM