Twisted Words
By Jef Raskin (unpublished)
This essay examined the widely circulated claim that humans can read text even when the interior letters of each word are scrambled, as long as the first and last letters remain in place.
The Phenomenon
A well-known internet meme demonstrated that most people can read passages where words like “according” are rendered as “aoccdrnig” with surprising ease. The claim was that the human brain reads words as whole units rather than letter-by-letter, making internal letter order less important than commonly assumed.
Raskin’s Analysis
Characteristically, Raskin did not simply accept the claim at face value. He investigated the conditions under which scrambled text remains readable and when it breaks down. Short, common words are far more resilient to scrambling than long or unusual ones. Context provides powerful clues that compensate for visual distortion. And the degree of scrambling matters — some rearrangements are much harder to decode than others.
Cognitive Implications
The essay connected these observations to broader questions about how the brain processes visual information. Raskin, whose interface design work was grounded in cognitive science, saw word recognition as a case study in the pattern-matching abilities that interface designers must understand and accommodate.
The Intentional Misspelling
The original filename for this essay — “twestid_wrods” — was itself a playful demonstration of the phenomenon, with both “twisted” and “words” scrambled according to the rule the essay examined.
This page is part of the Jef Raskin Archive, preserving the unpublished works of the creator of the Macintosh project.