Scientists find humans prefer walking anticlockwise, reason unclear
Researchers at the University of Navarra in Spain have discovered that people have a natural tendency to walk in an anticlockwise direction, according to a study published in Nature Communications. The finding emerged serendipitously during pandemic-era experiments on crowd spacing, when researchers noticed crowds overwhelmingly walked anticlockwise. Subsequent tests with individuals and small groups in enclosed spaces consistently showed the same bias, which was also observed in Japan by researchers at the University of Tokyo. The bias was more pronounced in children and held regardless of handedness, footedness, or eye dominance. Scientists have not identified the cause, but have ruled out cultural norms and tested biomechanical explanations without success. The discovery could improve crowd and evacuation simulations and inform the design of public spaces.
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Sources: The Guardian
