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- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!concert!ais.com!bruce
- From: bruce@ais.com (Bruce C. Wright)
- Newsgroups: comp.os.vms
- Subject: Re: End-user on-line Motif tutorial
- Message-ID: <1993Jan22.111437.5957@ais.com>
- Date: 22 Jan 93 11:14:37 GMT
- References: <01GTRC5F4HTS9JD28H@kbs.msu.edu>
- Distribution: world
- Organization: Applied Information Systems, Chapel Hill, NC
- Lines: 35
-
- In article <01GTRC5F4HTS9JD28H@kbs.msu.edu>, GORENTZ@KBS.MSU.EDU (John Gorentz) writes:
- >>Oh...here is a situation you are going to really like. We have some female
- >>employees that just can not get the hand/eye co-ordination going with the
- >>mouse. They always want to move their hand/mouse the _opposite_ direction they
- >>want to move the pointer. We tried to figure out why this was. Turns out that
- >>when the look at the terminal, they have some mental connection that says
- >>they are in front of a mirror (where I am told some females spend some time)
- >>and they do exactly everything _backward_ with the motor functions. The
- >>only way we have been able to get them to move the pointer in the right
- >>direction on the screen is to turn the mouse _upside down_. Yes...another
- >>amazing but true story from the journals of learned behavior.
- >
- > Now, now. I'll be on your side if Hillary tries to have you thrown into a
- > concentration camp for your PiC sexist observations, but what sample size are
- > we talking about here? There are many females in our department who use mice
- > -- clerical staff, professors, students, technicians, etc., and I've never
- > heard of any of them having any difficulty like this. I suppose I could have
- > just been unobservant, but there are millions of females who use computers
- > with mice, and no word of this phenomenon has made its way into any trade
- > journal articles I've ever read.
-
- I don't know how common the problem is, but my wife reported exactly the
- same thing when she first encountered mice -- she always wanted to move the
- mouse in the `wrong' direction. Her introspection led her to the same
- conclusion about the cause. For a while she used the mouse `upside down',
- but she finally got used to using mice in their `normal' orientation when
- she started to play Solitaire on MS-Windows.
-
- It's a well-known psychological result that there are perceptual differences
- between males and females; typically, men have better spatial perception
- and women are better at linguistic perception. If that isn't PC, then so
- much the worse for PC-ness. But I wouldn't touch the question of nature
- vs nurture with a ten-foot pole, at least on usenet.
-
- Bruce C. Wright
-