Lend A Helping Can

Lend A Helping Can

Lend a Helping Can raises money for 12 New England charitable agencies to feed the Needy and Homeless.

 

New Study On Humans Tend to Walk Counter-Clockwise, Why? Don't Know.

If you've ever felt like you naturally drift a certain way while walking, a team of

Spanish physicists has some news: Virtually everyone seems to drift the same way. In

a Nature Communications study, researchers in Spain and Japan report that in

experiment after experiment with hundreds of volunteers, people tended to move

counterclockwise, whether in a lab, an open schoolyard, or walking alone, reports the

New York Times.

It didn't really matter if they were right or left handed, what direction

they turned at a wall, or even what country they were in. Consider that the pattern

held in Japan, where pedestrian norms run opposite to those in Spain, and even in a

video of kindergartners freely roaming to music. The vast majority of subjects favored

counterclockwise movement, and the tendency appeared almost immediately, not as

a slow drift. Outside experts say the findings could reshape how we think about crowd

behavior and emergency evacuations.


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