Abstract:
Although there has been significant research into gender regarding educational and workplace
practices, there has been little awareness of gender differences as they pertain to software tools,
such as spreadsheet applications, that try to support end users in problem-solving tasks. Although
such software tools are intended to be gender agnostic, we believe that closer examination of this
premise is warranted. Therefore, in this paper, we report an end-to-end investigation into gender
differences with spreadsheet software. Our results showed gender differences in feature usage,
feature-related confidence, and tinkering (playful exploration) with features. Then, drawing
implications from these results, we designed and implemented features for our spreadsheet
prototype that took the gender differences into account. The results of an evaluation on this
prototype showed improvements for both males and females, and also decreased gender
differences in some outcome measures, such as confidence. These results are encouraging, but
also open new questions for investigation. We also discuss how our results compare to
generalization studies performed with a variety of other software platforms and populations.
Description:
This is the author's peer-reviewed final manuscript, as accepted by the publisher. The published article is copyrighted by Elsevier and can be found at: http://www.journals.elsevier.com/interacting-with-computers/.