Yes, to anyone who
learned to read that way, the left-to-right bias is extremely strong, and
changing it will make people uncomfortable and confused.
Anne
ANNE T LANE,
COLLECTIONS MANAGER
THE CHARLOTTE MUSEUM
OF HISTORY
WHERE
HISTORY HAS A HOME
3500 Shamrock Drive
Charlotte NC 28215
tel 704-568-1774, ext
110
fax 704-566-1817
From: Museum
discussion list [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Ann Craig
Sent: Thursday, April 22, 2010
1:10 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Visitors reading
timelines?
We are constructing an exhibit on the co-evolution of horses and
grasslands and are having some disagreement about which direction our timelines
and evolutionary "bushes" should move.
Should a single panel or case have time move from the left to the right
- from millions of years ago to the present - regardless of the direction which
visitors approach the panel or case?
OR
If visitors approach the panel or case from the right, should time
start from the right and move to the left?
I think visitors will always look at the case as a whole and then start
observing from the left to the right, just how they read.
What do you think?
Ann
Craig
Assistant
Director, Education
Museum
of Natural and Cultural History
University
of Oregon
Mailing:
1224 University of Oregon
Street
Address: 1680 East 15th Street
Eugene,
OR 97403
(541)
346-3116