0 the process of correcting itself when things begin to go wrong, without outside help:
The company cannot follow strategies that are unprofitable without self-correction.
From a cognitive perspective, reducing the commission of errors during learning reduces the demand on self-correction processes.
It is, in that sense, only a transitional usage, whose superseding by self-correction is continuously awaited.
The most common self-correction was at the lexical level.
For example, the scientific process involves ongoing testing and self-correction, whereas decision makers must act decisively, and with assurance, within relatively short time frames.
She found that learners used strategies such as self-correction and collaboration to exploit the linguistic and interactional features of online chatting.
The findings reveal that, after a slow start, the tutees' rates of self-correction began to rise, indicating improvements in reading skills.
Problem-solving mechanisms related to deficiencies in one's own language output have usually been termed self-correction or self-repair.
It looks like we have here a correction in next turn to line 6 (and self-correction in the third turn of line 8).