| I think it gets worse
> To prevent artifacts produced by head and eye movements caused by shifting gaze between the screen and the keyboard, typed words did not appear on the screen while the participant was typewriting. So no only were typists not touch typing, they couldn't see what they were typing. Too many variables are changed between the two tests. A) writers can see whole words vs no visual feedback
B) writers use their natural writing technique (2 or 3 fingers?) vs 1. It'd be interesting to test typing with a single hand (using words that can be entirely touch typed with one hand) I'm surprised the choose not to gather that data. https://repository.lsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2306&... Is interesting in that it shows the opposite effect: improved recall. It also measured velocity/speed of response. Which shows writing was faster. Another idea for a test: writing without ink. |
This is how I feel as a left hander while writing the old fashioned way. I can’t see what I’m writing so I get sloppy really quickly, and always need paper with lines.
Not that this makes their methodology not totally bunk, of course.