On Fri, Aug 12, 2022 at 9:43 AM Elina Gor via Origami <
origami@lists.digitalorigami.com> wrote:
> Thank you everyone who answered my request.
> I tried different academic databases like Google scholar, Proquest etc.
> But I didn't find what I was looking for. That's why I used this platform
> to
Hello Elina,
OrigamiUSA conducted a survey back in 2015 of over 1,700 individuals that
looked at various trends in origami and its relation to OrigamiUSA, and part of
that study looked at differences between gender, ethnicity, location, level of
education, categories of models folded, and much
I apologize for sarcastically nitpicking on John’s final point and for
ignoring the first part of his message.
His insights on the experiences of OPF were interesting and useful.
And looking at some of the other responses, it seems that there is
actually some useful data out there that could
On Fri, Aug 12, 2022 at 4:20 PM Joseph Wu wrote:
> On 2022-08-12 10:46, jscu...@ohiopaperfolders.com wrote:
> > And at the CenterFold origami convention based solely on the names of
> attendees this year was 52% "female". 2019 was 54%. Some of those are
> non-binary, trans etc. Just going by
I do actually know these people. This years convention was one week ago.
Let's put this one to bed. I could say that rain is wet and you would object.
Joseph Wu said:
I'm impressed you could tell so much from a list of names.
> On 13 Aug 2022, at 18.03, Alex Matthews via Origami
> The link for it is:
> https://origamiusa.org/news/update-2-origamiusa-survey-results-2015-2016.
> There is a wealth of information there that may help you in your research.
That is an amazing amount of data.
The male/female distribution