June 17, 2017

Forwarded from :

tlgspace"In November, Google released an online game called Quick, Draw!, in which users have 20 seconds to draw prompts like “camel” and “washing machine.” It’s fun, but the game’s real aim is to use those sketches to teach algorithms how humans draw. By May this year, the game had collected 50 million unique drawings.

We used the public database from Quick, Draw! to compare how people draw basic shapes around the world. Our analysis suggests that the way you draw a simple circle is linked to geography and cultural upbringing, deep-rooted in hundreds of years of written language, and significant in developmental psychology and trends in education today."

qz.com/994486/the-way-you-draw-circles-says-a-lot-about-you/

How do you draw a circle? We analyzed 100,000 circles to show how culture shapes our instincts

Did you start at the top or bottom? Clockwise or counterclockwise?