Guess the personality of the person through the computer screen

If you see messy icons on some computer screen, you can guess its owner is a liberal, highly educated pursuit, living in the city and loving numbers. .

Hunch.com is a website that offers suggestions for readers based on research, opinion polls, hobby surveys. This site has just conducted a survey to find out the relationship between display on computer screens and people's personalities.

The first remarkable thing is that gender plays an important role in the level of computer screen tidy. Men tend to display icons, images more neatly than women, Livescience said.

Picture 1 of Guess the personality of the person through the computer screen
Computer monitors with neatly arranged icons are often the product of those who value personal life more than work. Photo: forumvi.com.

The way of arranging icons and images on computer screens also shows part of the educational process and the users' living places.The messy screen savers have a higher probability of owning a college degree than those with neat screens . Residents in densely populated cities tend to leave everything on the screen arbitrarily, while those with tidy screens often live in rural areas or suburbs.

'The clutter on the screen shows two things. Maybe someone chooses the screen clutter because they use computers to do a lot of things. So the computer screens of executives are often messy. Of course, some people talk indiscriminately because they don't know how to order things in order, or they rarely use computers so they don't bother with the mess on the screen ', Amanda Green, real leader Current survey, speech.

The messy screen people tend to learn better math and love the numbers and concepts. They think that work is an important part of their lives and personal life behind work.

In contrast, those who regularly rearrange icons on the computer screen show a passion for technology and consider private life the most important thing. A large proportion of these people work only to get money to cover the essential needs of life, not to consider work as life's life.