lilleyt said:This is an assertion which may be true, and certainly fits my intuition. However, I've stopped short of claiming that I know this is true for a fact. I have not been able to find any research to confirm/reject the hypothesis that the index and middle are stronger or more coordinated than the ring finger. Pinky is pretty obviously not. The only physiological fact I've been able to determine is that the middle and ring fingers share a tendon at the wrist. While I'm not in disagreement with you, it would be good to have the claim backed up by something more than anecdotal evidence.
Yeah, I agree with you completely. I've searched for research on this topic, but haven't been able to locate any. So, basically these are statements based in let's say educated belief - educated by the fact that I'm a very profficient typist with 25 years of intense typing.
However, most of this reasoning I'm deducing by basically feel - meaning I postulate a though that seems generally plausible and then spend a couple of hours, typing and focusing on the thought.
So, I'm strongly convinced that the index and middle, are much stronger and coordinated than, of course, the pinky, but also the ring ones.
This ends up being possibly important because of another, provable effect, that of finger rolls. It's easier for your fingers to activate from pinky to index than the other way around.
I think so too, and here again, it's only based on feel. But I think this point most typists will agree with easily. Once trying inward rolls vs outward, it's apparent to feel the difference right away.
When it comes to the frequently used letters, there's the possibility that a ring finger placement might give more opportunities for rolls to occur in the proper direction. This depends on whether the digraph frequency has the frequently used letter in front of the alternate letters more frequently than not.
I have given this a lotta though, but when you look at digram and trigram frequencies in the English language, for instance at http://www.cryptograms.org/letter-frequencies.php
it doesn't seem to support this. The only digram that seems frequent enough is `th', with the possible trigram `the', but everything else seems so low in frequency that it doesn't seem to warrant heavy roll consideration.
白い熊 said:For righthanded typists the right hand fingers also being much more coordinated. Thus, even on the home row these should be prefered.
I doubt this is true. Again, I've got no evidence. However, I don't notice any perceptible difference in my left versus right-hand typing.
I agree with you with regard to typing, but I would attribute it to mental paths developed by touchtyping practice. But again, a scientifically unsubstatiated feel would lead me to say right is generally better than left, but not go overboard on this. Basically meaning, when considering equivalent placement on either side of the keyboard, the higher frequency letter should go on the right, whereas the next-in-line left.
In any case, hand alternation is a more important metric than putting all the frequently used keys on the right hand. Once you've grouped according to good hand alternation though, you can choose to put the group which happens to be more frequent on the right hand if you desired.
This seems to me to be the hardest part of an effective layout design. Maybe even warranting some alternation frequency analysis, need to consider this with my test layout.
I think it's a mistake to focus on the home row without taking into account the natural flexion of the fingers. You should take a look at the Workman layout's rationale if you haven't already. The top row keys above the index and ring fingers are very close to the usability of the home row keys (in fact, I've seen suggestions that a better home "row" would have your index and ring rest on those keys rather than the traditional home).
I agree with you, these keys are very operable, much more so, it seems at times than keys on the extreme ends of the home row. I've developed a purely numerical ranking of key operability, which I'm testing with the key layout, and it favors these keys, but maybe still not enough, I need to do more thinking on this...
Thanks a lot for the criticism, and hope there's more...