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  2. Scroll wheel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scroll_wheel

    The scroll wheel on a mouse has been invented multiple times by different people unaware of the others' work. Other scrolling controls on a mouse, and the use of a wheel for scrolling both precede the combination of wheel and mouse. The earliest known example of the former is the Mighty Mouse prototype developed jointly by NTT, Japan and ETH Zürich, Switzer

  3. Eric Michelman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eric_Michelman

    Modern scroll wheel on 5-button mouse. (2008) Eric Michelman, a graduate from MIT, is credited with inventing the now commonplace computer input device known as the scroll wheel. Scroll wheels are most often located between the left and right-click buttons on modern computer mice.

  4. Mouse wheel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mouse_wheel

    Mouse wheel may refer to: Hamster wheel; Treadmill; Treadwheel; The scroll wheel of a computer mouse This page was last edited on 5 ...

  5. Scrolling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scrolling

    Scrolling can be controlled in other software-dependent ways by a PC mouse. Some scroll wheels can be pressed down, functioning like a button. Depending on the software, this allows both horizontal and vertical scrolling by dragging in the direction desired; when the mouse is moved to the original position, scrolling stops.

  6. IntelliPoint - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IntelliPoint

    Universal Scrolling is a software function within IntelliPoint that allows a scroll wheel to work with programs that do not natively support that method of input. If a program supports scroll wheels natively, the Universal Scrolling feature will generally not interfere with the native implementation.

  7. Hit-testing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hit-testing

    In computer graphics programming, hit-testing (hit detection, picking, or pick correlation [1]) is the process of determining whether a user-controlled cursor (such as a mouse cursor or touch-point on a touch-screen interface) intersects a given graphical object (such as a shape, line, or curve) drawn on the screen.

  8. Page Up and Page Down keys - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Page_Up_and_Page_Down_keys

    The two keys are primarily used to scroll up or down in documents, but the scrolling distance varies between different applications. In word processors, for instance, they may jump by an emulated physical page or by a screen view that may show only part of one page or many pages at once depending on zoom factor.

  9. Open field (animal test) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_Field_(animal_test)

    When the test was first developed, it was pharmacologically validated through the use of benzodiazepines, a common anxiety medication. Newer drugs such as 5-HT-1A partial agonists and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors , which have also been proven to treat anxiety, show inconsistent results in this test.