Women Need Larger Screens for Desktop Navigation? 693
Mac of Macistan writes "In a recent
article in the New Scientist, Microsoft's R&D claims that women have a harder time navigating the desktop because their spatial abilities are roughly 20% lower than men's abilities. Maybe Linux UI people can get a jump on MS by making KDE/Gnome more accessible to more females."
Then why do they.... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Then why do they.... (Score:5, Funny)
I suppose you haven't been paying attention to your e-mail [devin.com] lately?
JP
Re:Then why do they.... (Score:5, Funny)
Maybe in your case their lack of spatial acuity works in your favor.
Re:Then why do they.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Slashdot SERIOUSLY messed this article summary up. Women do NOT have "problems nagivating the desktop". According to this article, women have less spacial cognizance when it comes to 3D environments such as FPS, MMORPG or games like Myst. 3D virtual worlds, NOT THE DESKTOP.
What I DON'T want to see is a bunch of jerks spouting "women have a harder time navigating the desktop" than men, because Slashdot farked up their summary of the article. I mean, SERIOUSLY FSCKED it up. Desktop = 2D. Get it straight, boys... A lot of your readers only read the summary snippets and don't bother with the articles.
For this kind of readership, you may just have spawned a whole new inaccurate generalization about women.
Thanks, we needed this new kind of misinformation.
I have no problem with the article, but I have a BIG problem with the summary snippet.
Get it right.
Re:Then why do they.... (Score:4, Interesting)
If you are going to bitch about the summary at least bitch about the person that made the mistake. Or be more specific that the person approving this article should have appended the summary with a correct description of the article.
Get it right.
Re:Then why do they.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Then why do they.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Have you seen the dudes that visit Slashdot? Trust me when I say this generalization is safely contained.
at least (Score:2, Funny)
Cart before the horse (Score:5, Funny)
Maybe they should focus on making it accessible to regular people, and THEN focus on a sub-demographic.
Generalizations (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Generalizations (Score:3, Interesting)
all very well, but don't you think the few women who DO use PCs are in the almost-like-a-man range of spatial abilities?
FWIW, my bf (household alpha geek) can't navigate for s***, whereas I (less geeky, but maybe some modding up on /. will help) have great visuospatial abilities. Yesterday we went to the park to fly our kite and by the time we were leaving, he was completely disoriented ... heh.
Re:Generalizations (Score:2)
Super geek, super brain and the worst navigator/easiest to get misoriented living being I have ever met!
Re:Generalizations (Score:3, Insightful)
I think that there are *many* outliers providing examples to the contrary. Particularly in
I should add that I'm no humour slouch either - apologies if I'm coming across like some dry, humourless old stick, but I think that applying such broad brush-strokes to say that men's and women's experiences and understanding of humour is fundamentally different, could be dangerous (I'm not b
Re:Generalizations (Score:3, Funny)
I was about to criticize the argument-from-authority thing going on between you two as a "willy-waving" contest (traditional CMU bboard terminology), but that sort of comment just doesn't work in this context.
Re:Generalizations (Score:4, Funny)
Hence the 'farting is always funny syndrome'.
Max
Re:Generalizations (Score:4, Insightful)
don't you think the few women who DO use PCs are in the almost-like-a-man range of spatial abilities?
Maybe I've been trolled, but I'll bite anyway. More than 'a few women' use PCs. Every office worker these days has a PC. A large proportion of these office workers are women. Sure, maybe there are less female programmers out there (that's another topic altogether), but not only programmers use PCs, you know.
Re:Generalizations (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Generalizations (Score:3, Funny)
Does this mean women are better at CLI?
Re:Generalizations (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Generalizations (Score:3, Insightful)
There are people who do use their cycles.... mp3 rippin' fiends, the divx encoding type, researches, gammers and graphic artists (especially if you
Uh-oh (Score:4, Funny)
But widescreen will make my butt look bigger!!!
*wail*
What a girl wants... (Score:5, Funny)
Uh... yea. Because Linux and women go together like peanut butter and chocolate.
Re:What a girl wants... (Score:2, Funny)
Didn't you mean to say, "Uh...yeah. Because Linux and women go together like chopped liver and pancakes." -- or something like that?
Re:What a girl wants... (Score:3, Funny)
( [penny-arcade.com]
girls don't even like that kind of stuff. They want RAM.)
3D, not desktop (Score:5, Informative)
The arcticle speculates that this may be due to evolutionary reasons; men are on average better at spatial-awareness for navigation when hunting, while women wouldn't have needed such skills looking after the home camp.
Re:3D, not desktop (Score:5, Interesting)
So in the future it may be useful to allow for a gender related setting.
Re:3D, not desktop (Score:3, Funny)
I can't wait until "My Computer" actually looks like my computer. Oh, and the "Recycling Bin" looks like a REAL recycling bin. Will they EVER stop innovating at Microsoft?
Re:3D, not desktop (Score:5, Funny)
Finally, I'll now have a scientific explanation why 'some poeple' shouldn't be allowed to drive.
Humor. Don't shoot.
Re:3D, not desktop (Score:5, Interesting)
Of course the number of women as opposed to men who are in the automotive design and engineering fields is disproportionately low, and this may actually be one of the reasons. Interesting...
Re:Not the field but the fellow students that dive (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm a guy and I like to print out my programs sometimes when I'm debugging them. Sometimes it helps just to see the source code on a different medium when you're looking for bugs, especially when you're frustrated with a particularly annoying one. It think it's more a psychological thing than a spatial thing.
Re:3D, not desktop (Score:5, Interesting)
This is one of the things discussed in a book called "The First Sex." The thesis is that men and women are different, because of evolutionary pressures. The author also argues that the areas where women excel over men (e.g. social coordination, as mentioned in the Counter Strike example) are the very skills that are going to be most needed in the near future, so women will continue to play a larger and larger role in the work force.
An interesting read.
Re:3D, not desktop (Score:5, Interesting)
Keep in mind that hunting was a difficult enterprise, physically strenuous and dangerous. You couldn't just nick off to Wal-mart and buy a 22 -- you had a sharpened stick and some obsidian flakes and that's about it. So it makes evolutionary sense that cultures that kept their women away from the hunt would prosper -- fewer dead or injured women that way. That doesn't mean that men did nothing else -- there's a lot of evidence that foraging was the primary source of food. Anybody who thinks women were just going to shut up and let the ment lounge around while they toiled hasn't been nagged to clean the garage.
Yeah, I think there's an evolutionary benefit to nagging.
My Intro to Archeology professor was a feminist (ostensibly because he had an open marriage and wanted to tag some college tail, not happening the guy was sleazy and still wore tight jeans from the 1970s) and loved to bring up the dichotomy between the classic "Man as Hunter/Scholar" and post modern "Woman as Gatherer/Nurturer" theories of human evolution, as well as what was supported by the meager evidence. In essence, it seemed to prove that neither sex "had it easy" and he went on to tie this into the historical record and a nice long lecture about how modern gender roles are thrusting women into the workplace without removing their previous roles in the home and how this is changing faster than men's roles and how men should clean the the house more, blah blah. I kinda slept through most of that.
My wife, however, took excellent notes, which she is referring to to this day.
Re:3D, not desktop (Score:3, Informative)
Sorry, Folks. That's bullshit. I"m calling it. It's what's called "Lamarckian evolution" and sadly, it goes on every day. Lamark believed that somatype mutations and changes are hereditary. For example, an adult has an arm removed, and when he/she reproduces the children should have onl
Re:3D, not desktop (Score:3, Insightful)
You get more guys doing weird/silly stuff (case-mods, lego, etc) despite lots of other people saying discouraging things. Same for hobbies/sports/tech/finance etc.
In contrast one keeps seeing calls to encourage women to get into XYZ, requests for people not to discourage them etc. Personally I think most just aren'
lets be more acurate (Score:2, Funny)
men _on_the_average_ have better 3d (and numaric) abilities, while woman are _on_the_average_ better at linguistic abilities.
the standard deviation in each group, however is bigger then the diff in the averages, so it says little about comparing any two individuals.
This has been known for quite a while. IQ tests, for instance, give numarical and linguistic abilities equal value exactly because of this.
Re:3D, not desktop (Score:3, Interesting)
If this is the case, it is easy to understand how someone who relies o
Re:3D, not desktop (Score:5, Insightful)
This seems like a lot of BS to me. Women just don't seem interested in 3d games like most men. Therefore, I would suggest that we men develop more skill in the 3d world of computers than women at an earlier age. Most 3d games are about violence which is undeniably a greater part of male human mentality than female.
I happen to know women that will destroy you in counter-strike, and I'm sure most of you do too. If a girl played as much video games as men, then I bet you wouldn't notice a difference. Also, women using computers more slowly than men can be attributed to the fact that men are also generally more interested in technology at a younger age.
I don't think interest in technology is genetic though. I think it's a product of society. Girls are encouraged to imagine the perfect guy and starve themselves until they are married it seems. Boys are taught to protect siblings, themselves, women, and property with violence or by violence from a child that learned that violence is a solution to problems from fighting parents. (or even television like The 3 Ninjas, TMNT, etc.)
I dare them to try children with equal experience with computers. If it had been a reputable "discovery" I think that is where the research would have began. Or try men from third world countries where technology isn't available.
I think the trend will change the more technology is required to live and the more games are made for women (The Sims, Sim Park, etc.) or at least genderless (snood et al).
Re: (Score:2)
*I* need a bigger monitor - here's why (Score:5, Funny)
Halfway through the last sentence I must have skipped a line, since I read it as "Maybe Linux UI people will get more females". Now, if I had a bigger monitor, the lines wouldn't break right there, making my (sick?) mind leap to conclude what may well be an impossible, yet interesting, turn of events.
Re:*I* need a bigger monitor - here's why (Score:4, Insightful)
I spy a Weird Al reference (Score:2)
Re:I spy a Weird Al reference (Score:2)
Orientation (Score:5, Insightful)
Wider screens and more realistic 3D animations, they say, will boost women's spatial orientation and 3D map-reading skills to match those of their male counterparts.
Heck, this'll boost anyone's spatial orientation.
Women, they found, find it easier to get their bearings when this animation is smooth and realistic, rather than jerky.
Just about everyone does.
Is it possible that with more intensive training, this spatial perception inequality might be eliminated?
(Hint: Use this as an excuse to get more UT2K3 playing in!!!)
Re:Orientation (Score:5, Insightful)
Also, why divide people based on gender? I'm sure SOME of the men had poor spacial oriention, and SOME of the women must have been good at the task. Why not simply divide people into "fast" and "slow" groups based on performance in the initial set of tests? They don't seem to have done any testing to determine if solutions which seem to work for average women also work for under-performing men.
Re:Orientation (Score:2)
But one thing I can do is remember my path even if I only drove or walked it once a long time ago. I have no idea if that is a male or female thing. My wife is consta
More display helps women more than men (Score:5, Informative)
To summarize: The article does not state if the larger display helped men or not, but with the larger display, men and women tested equally.
Re:More display helps women more than men (Score:3, Insightful)
Sentence one vividly associates 'they' with
"Czerwinski and her Microsoft colleague George Robertson"
Sentence two immediately references they.
Re:Orientation (Score:3, Funny)
Actually it said the gender difference disappeared in that case. So presumably, the men experienced a slight increase or no increase at all, and women experienced a larger increase to bring them to parity.
This might explain why my ex-gf would wait until I was cruising past an intersection in the left-hand lane to shout "TURN RIGHT!!!" and could never tell me
Re:Orientation (Score:3, Informative)
I usually hate this type of article and it is mostly **** but I must say from personal experience that when I play a 3D game, say UT2K3 or other, on my laptop with 14" screen I get major motion sickness. When I play on 17" or higher I don't. Not sure if that is a specific side effect from their study, as it isn't very clear from the article.
Though this does not mean it's specifically a "woman" thing, it seems quite weir
Gender Equality (Score:5, Insightful)
I mean perhaps the "spatial ability" of the different genders is tuned to a different form of interface. Perhaps the symptom we should be addressing is that current user interfaces are designed for use from the male aspect, and therefore the generic woman (whatever that is) functions in such an environment.
In my psychology days we looked at many examples of studies that were swayed in a particular direction to to flaws in the testing procedures.
Not to say that this article in new scientist really backs up its claims - statements such as it seems
But that's aside from the point - I can accept that men and women interact with a user interface in differing ways. But to suggest that taking a "male" user interface, and making it bigger - to adapt it more to the "generic woman" (see above) - I find ludicrous, and a vast underestimation of the task at hand.
I'm just stirring, but I think it's really something to think about in the next decade as we move away from windowing environments to whatever is next - be it 3D interfaces on a 2D display, virtual immersion - or whatever... We need to think about things more than "lets make it bigger".
Re:Gender Equality (Score:4, Funny)
News Flash (Score:5, Insightful)
Instead of trying to say both genders are equal, why not try this radical approach: accept that one gender has advantages over the other in some areas, and vice versa in others, and use those differences for the greater good!
Re:News Flash (Score:5, Insightful)
How about an even more radical approach: accept that not all members of a given group are the same, and instead of assigning gender roles, encourage people to do whatever they're good at! If that means that there are more men doing tasks that involve spatial orientation, fine, wonderful. But it's absurd to say that women shouldn't do those tasks because they're not as good at them. People are individuals, not averages. Even your example of bearing children is not universal: some women can't give birth. So cut this evolutionary psychology crap and judge people for who they are, not based how a sample group of the same gender performed in a laboratory setting.
Re:News Flash (Score:5, Funny)
"Heh. News flash, the genders aren't equal. One of them can bear children..."
T&K.
Re:News Flash (Score:2)
Men: Better at orientation and navigation.
Women: Better social skills.
Right. In the unlikely event that I get lost if I'm driving somewhere with my girlfriend, she can get out of the car and ask for directions!
Re:News Flash (Score:2)
Re:News Flash (Score:4, Interesting)
That's why gender is a better explanation than it is a justification, if you get my drift.
Re:News Flash (Score:2)
How about
Re:News Flash (Score:3, Insightful)
Another way of looking at it is this. By just about any demographical difference in people, there are differences in performance areas as well, but nothing special needs to be done. If one race or gender is 20% better at something, the
Re:Gender Equality (Score:2)
That said, the "women need bigger screens" study strikes me as very much akin to the "blacks are genetically better athletes but worse thinkers" type studies. In the past these studies were used as a justification for forcing African-descended people into low-pay manual la
Re:Gender Equality (Score:3, Insightful)
One of the reason for the jewish bankers is that the christian theorcracy taught that it was unchristian to charge interest on lent money, also why there were also many more christian hog butcher at the same time.
Re:Gender Equality (Score:5, Insightful)
A larger screen doesn't increase your 3D visualization ability. It simply increases your sensory input--namely sight. The article implies the hypothesis that what women are seeing affects their thought processes.
Men scored better because they have more gamers? (Score:2)
I have to wonder if the men averaged faster because many of them were avid gamers. Those who play FPS video games like Doom, Quake and UT quite a bit are going to be much much better at navigating a 3D world than anyone else. The poor gamers will also have plenty of experience with small screens. Duh. I wonder if the reasearchers even thought of this.
Linux IS already more usable... (Score:5, Funny)
I always suspected that God was a woman...
Re:Linux IS already more usable... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Uh. Excuse me. (Score:2)
This is not really new (Score:5, Interesting)
So you could say: vector images are male, while bitmap images are female.
But of course, this is a generalisation, I know a lot of women who can navigate on a map very well, while a male friend of mine is terrible at knowing where he is.
Re:This is not really new (Score:2)
Coincidentally, all the landmarks are restaurants.
FPS disadvantage... (Score:2)
Re:FPS disadvantage... (Score:2)
Well, I dunno why Tomb Raider is said to be just as popular among women as it is among men then. :)
Simple tasks get done - Settings are the issue (Score:2)
The majority of basic tasks are very easy to pickup with a little training. This is proved by the vast majority of computer users being able to perform basic common computer tesks such as email, web browsing, word processing, etc.
The problem is in controlling the settings.
In too many cases common configuration settings are buried too deep in the UI. Let's take t
Idiotic conclusion (Score:5, Interesting)
I score very bad on spatial ability, and I am a man. My father does the same. Incidentally we're both computer consultants.
Wouldn't it be smarter to say that people with low spatial ability need bigger screens for the same performance? Why the gender thing? Battle of the sexes?
Re:Idiotic conclusion (Score:2)
I stopped referring to dead people as "the encephalographically challenged" a long time ago.
Re:Idiotic conclusion (Score:3, Insightful)
In your post, you keep confusing the term "Politically correct" with "smarter". Please avoid this error in the future.
Seriously, though... Would you also say "To make a difference between men and women WRT child-bearing is completely idiotic. It is much smarter to make a difference between people with wombs and without"
then what? women are tidier! (Score:2, Funny)
Don't know if it is true (Score:5, Interesting)
The right temporal lobe is the part of the brain that controls spatial ability, so after it was excised, I completely lost my ability to orient myself, and have huge problems with getting home from the bus stop and things like that. Nonetheless, it has not stopped me being able to navigate a computer desktop at all.
I am not sure why this is, but I would be interested to know if people like myself were included in this study at all.
There could be other factors at play here.
Re:Don't know if it is true (Score:4, Interesting)
Navigating the computer desktop is a two-dimensional task, which does not require quite the same internalised map of the world as a three-dimensional task like finding your way home from the bus-stop. Experiments with rats and mazes (and rat-sized brain ops) show that the temporal lobe is critical for navigational success. In fact, other areas of your brain are also involved in spatial orientation, but spatially-orienting yourself to use your internalised map of the world cannot really be carried out without the temporal lobe. Saying that, you still have your left temporal lobe, so it is possible that some spatial-orientation functions will still be intact?
Microsoft sexist too? (Score:2)
Bigger screen in linux ? (Score:3, Funny)
So you are saying, that linux makes your screen bigger? Wow, I quess I'll try it right now! Does this screen largening effect also work if used with VMWare? How big will my 15" screen get when using linux? 17"? Or maybe even 19"? Is widescreen supported yet?
And remember folks (Score:5, Insightful)
What this does say is that there is generally significant difference between the two groups... so why not use it?
In the future the key is to ask "Would you like a larger desktop?" instead of "Are you a woman?" Allow personalization without mandating bias.
Otherwise its like only making jeans in 32"I 32"W and saying to everyone "You better fit into these because this is all you're going to get."
Re:And remember folks (Score:2)
How about childbirth?
It's a pipe dream (no pun intended) (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah - because now all of a sudden Linux geeks will have some insight into what women want? If they could do that, they might make themselves presentable to women, not design a UI for them.
On second thought, which is more likely?
spacial ability and medicine (Score:4, Interesting)
Children or no-children (Score:4, Interesting)
It's interesting the researchers would conclude woman are 20% less effecient than men at spacially processing information.
Assuming this is true (not taking a position), I'm a bit surprised no one tried breaking down the group of women to isolate the cause.
Everyone jumped to the same "genetic" conclusion (women make lousy hunters). It could be as simple as physical and chemical changes after having children (sometimes derridingly called 'placenta brain'): perhaps women's brains go into a rapid form of job-specialization (rearing) which translates into other disadvantages.
I don't have a position on any of this since it's a one pager (and New Scientist), but it would be interesting to see if the causes were genetic, as the article simply assumed.
It has been studied.. (Score:3, Informative)
http://psych.unn.ac.uk/users/nick/hormoneslec06.ht m [unn.ac.uk]
http://www.neoteny.org/a/lateralization3.html [neoteny.org]
Geez... doesn't this figure? (Score:3, Funny)
Curious (Score:2)
Man's horizons are bounded by his vision.
A few details (Score:3, Interesting)
Spatial relations: An observable fact in Tetris .. (Score:5, Interesting)
I noticed it when other girls would play too.
What's interesting about this observation and what I would like answered is this:
Why was the Gameboy version the easiest to me? Monochrome?
Why was the regular, original Nintendo the best version?
Why was the arcade version so hard?
Why is the computer version boring?
Why does it make a difference with how the pieces are colored or how they look?
I do agree with the find too. Girls see no "gadget, cool" factor in a small TV. I once took a Casio TV on a camping trip with the same girl so she could watch 90210. We ended up having to go out of our way and watch it on a "normal" TV.
I think the real answer here is that women like consistency and normalcy. I find they hate big screen TV's as much as they hate Casio handhelds. All they want is content! (Something that can also be inferred and suggested)
And yet... (Score:3, Funny)
Whoa, wait a minute - this *is* a major discovery (Score:4, Funny)
;)
might be a bias in the design and/or test? (Score:4, Interesting)
As an example, let's look at the controversial SAT exam. This test has been, and may still be, written for, by, and of privately east coast educated white people. For example, when the ETS evaluats the suitability of questions, at least in the near past, the questions that make it onto the real test were those that upper class east-coast white people did best on. This not some because of some explicit prejudice, but merely because the conventional wisdom said upper class east coast white people, as a group, were better educated and smarted, and question that they did best with were in fact the best questions. The corollary is that minority off coast people were less educated, and if they did well on a question, it was obviously a bad question.
Which is to say that history is written by the victors, and critical usability and evaluation points are chosen by the managers and designers. In this case, the computer programs and usability tests may be biased to a male population. Perhaps the issue is not so much screen size, but rather the assumption that a certain pattern of use, or a certain problem solving method, is going to be primary for all users. This is an especially good possibility for 3D technology as it is not yet in wide use, and would be particularly susceptible to these aberrations.
All hypothetical (Score:3, Interesting)
PS> The words "male" and "female" are traditionally not applied to human beings. It would be like saying "two people mated" rather than "they had sex."
Re:Widescreens (a la 16:9) (Score:5, Interesting)
I bought the SGI 1600SW a couple years ago and let me tell ya, I hate trying to use a "standard" square monitor now... the extra width really does make a considerable difference.
Heck, you can have a web-page, or man page, or whatever open in one window and your code open in another and you can easily read both withouth needing to use "trasparancy" hacks.
My next LCD monitor will also be widescreen, the benifits far outweigh anything negative I could think of... erm, well actually I can't think of anything negative about widescreen.
Re: (Score:2)
Xinerama (Score:2)
Now, if they can just get DRI and Xinerama to play nice together....
Re:Widescreens (a la 16:9) (Score:2)
the biggest single reason for them is to be able to view 2 pages at the same time, side by side.
I even remember an advert for a monitor from years past that could be turned on its side, thus giving you a similar effect (though, perhaps, it wasn't so successful..)
Its only a matter of time before Widescreens come to monitors - once 1 manufacturer does it, and graphics cards support the new resolutions, then they'll all d
Re:Sounds like... (Score:5, Insightful)
I work in this field of psychology and believe it or not, this is one of the few areas of human performance where genuine sex differences are observed - repeatedly and reliably.
You can see this principally in the visuo-spatial section of IQ tests. Some authors (e.g. Kimura [www.sfu.ca]) argue that this is because IQ tests tap a particular aspect of visuo-spatial awareness and that men are naturally superior in this regard, but that women excel in other visuo-spatial tests which tap different facets of the skill.
If you go back forty years, IQ tests used to "show" that ethnic minorities were less clever - now it is known that those early tests were highly culturally-specific ("If you give the maid twenty items of clothing to press but she already has another thirty-two from your Ma and Pa, what time can you arrive at your tennis lesson?") - I think in a couple of decades we'll be seeing IQ tests that are a whole lot less gender-biased.
Re:Sounds like... (Score:5, Insightful)
Women are worse at spatial orientation. Who cares? I'm quite sure there's something they're also _better_ at than men. Doesn't make one gender or the other "better", it just illustrates that certain genders are better at certain things. Saying this is "sexist" is not only stupid, but impedes real scientific research.
-Erwos
okay where are the people who read articles? (Score:3, Informative)