13.0
Copyright 2014 Nuance Communications, Inc. All rights reserved
40
Correcting Dragon’s Errors in Your Dictated Text
Human beings sometimes can’t recognize words correctly—especially if the speaker and the listener come from
different regions, if the speaker is discussing an unfamiliar subject, or if the words are not well articulated. In
addition, when we hear a word for the first time, we may not know how to spell it. Some people’s first or last
names can be spelled different ways (like Gene/Jean, Hansen/Hanson).
This is also true for Dragon! The software uses contextual clues and statistical information to guess what to
transcribe, but sometimes cannot guess correctly. In particular, it may not recognize uncommon words on the first
try, and instead types something that was likely according to its statistics. It cannot recognize and transcribe a
word it has never seen.
Fortunately, in addition to optimizing acoustic factors, taking advantage of the vocabulary customization tools and
using proper correction techniques will significantly reduce the number of errors. Dragon’s Help contains many
details about the different ways to perform it, including by keyboard.
You can choose when to perform corrections. If you look at your screen while dictating and you notice that
Dragon just got a word wrong, it's usually best to finish your train of thought before you correct that
misrecognition: you may want to at least finish your paragraph. That being said, if the misrecognition affects a
word which is likely to appear many times in your document, it's a good idea to correct it as soon as possible.
Handling multiple matches in your text
Dragon lets you directly address a specific word or phrase in your text. When you give a command such as
“correct <xyz>” or “bold <xyz>” or “delete <xyz>” or “capitalize <xyz>”(<xyz> being the word or phrase to address)
and Dragon finds several matches, Dragon places a number next to each match.
You can then say the number of the desired one.
If you wish to affect all matches at once, you can say “choose all”. (If you want the numbers to disappear, say
“cancel”, click your mouse, or just keep dictating.)
Saying “undo that” undoes the change for just the last instance of <xyz>. To undo the change to all instances, say
“undo all".
Note: “Choose all” cannot work for “select” or for “insert before/after”. If you wish to replace several instances, you
may want to explore your application’s capabilities for replacing, including specific capitalization (the
illustration below is from Microsoft Word 2010).










