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HandwritingProfiles.com

Exposing the Personality Behind the Pen!

Michael at HandwritingProfiles.com

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We are an online Company that offers Handwriting based profiles for Personality, Compatibility and Business.
December 22

Personality Profiles

HandwritingProfiles.com offers a comprehensive personality and compatibility profile product.  Go to www.handwritingprofiles.com to try this product out.

HandwritingProfiles.com Launches New Handwriting Compatibility Product for Online Dating Sites

Handwriting recognition tool allows dating sites to add a new spin on personality profiling to their sites

(PRWEB) May 10, 2006 -- Online dating sites have a new tool to drive more users to their sites and increase conversions. A new twist on personality and compatibility profiling, handwriting analysis software is now available from HandwritingProfiles.com for integration into dating site offerings.

 Customer acquisition costs are high and rising higher in the online dating industry. Companies are looking for novel ways to lower the costs, lengthen user membership and improve conversions. The solution offered by HandwritingProfiles.com is a great component for innovative online singles companies to add to their offerings. 
"Everyone’s handwriting represents a unique brainprint of that individual and provides key personality insights about themselves or others in their lives," says National Society For Graphology-certified handwriting expert Michael Kahlowsky and founder of HandwritingProfiles.com (www.handwritingprofiles.com).

The Handwriting Profiles software can be quickly integrated into an online personals web site to enable its users to take an "online handwriting test". Users simply click the button beneath whichever aspect most matches their handwriting. For example, does their writing slant to the left, right, or not at all? The user simply clicks the button that best matches their handwriting style. The results are calculated through the software code using a proprietary algorithm developed by HandwritingProfiles.com to determine each person's unique personality traits. This profile can be compared to other profiles and scored for compatibility.

The "Invitee Link" software feature is a powerful viral marketing feature where users can invite others to see how compatible they are with one another through the handwriting test. This powerful new feature provides the online dating site with a unique, brandable tool to reach out to their non-paying membership base and generate word-of-mouth buzz.

"Customer acquisition costs are high and rising higher in the online dating industry. Companies are looking for novel ways to lower the costs, lengthen user membership and improve conversions. The solution offered by HandwritingProfiles.com is a great component for innovative online singles companies to add to their offerings." said Mark Brooks, online dating industry veteran, consultant and editor of OnlinePersonalsWatch.com, the leading industry news web site.

Through the science of handwriting analysis, the underlying compatibility and personality traits of a potential partner are revealed and explained to help users better understand similarities and differences and improve their chances of having a more successful and fulfilling relationship.

About HandwritingProfiles.com
HandwritingProfiles.com is a leading handwriting analysis company, providing comprehensive personality, compatibility, business, and vocational guidance assessments to individuals, couples, corporations, executive recruiters, colleges and universities worldwide.

Michael S. Kahlowsky is founder and chief executive officer of HandwritingProfiles.com. Kahlowsky is a Certified Handwriting Expert by the National Society of Graphology in New York City, and has been studying handwriting analysis for more than a decade. Kahlowsky has an extensive background in handwriting analysis relating to personality and relationship compatibility, where he has helped both individuals and couples gain insight into their own characteristics and traits and those of their current and potential mates.

Contact:
Michael Kahlowsky
www.handwritingprofiles.com
561-302.7655.

Oodles of doodles: They're just not mindless squiggles

Oodles of doodles: They're just not mindless squiggles
January 22, 2004    by:   Ray Hogan - Staff Writer

It's a habit that extends from the classroom to the boardroom, and those who partake have little control over it.

Not an illicit behavior but the time-honored tradition of doodling.

Words. Geometric shapes. Squiggly lines. Think of any image, concrete or abstract, and there's a good chance someone's doodled it.

"It's like freedom of expression without a goal. We do it simply for the pleasure and hopefully we're not judging ourselves as to how it looks," says Katherine Q. Revoir, a San Francisco-based creative mentor and author of "Spiritual Doodles & Mental Leapfrogs: A Playbook for Unleashing Spiritual Self-Expression" (Red Wheel/Weiser, $16.95). "There aren't a lot of things in society that aren't judged on how they look."

Laura Newman, a public relations specialist in New Canaan, figures she fills one to three legal-size pages with her doodles daily. In her case, it's random words and letters, squares and geometric shapes. The words have no significance, yet she can't stop writing them and embellishing their shapes. "I have to force myself to get the pen out of my hand," she says. "It's almost like biting my nails. I feel this need to move pen to paper."

It hasn't been hard to find habitual doodlers; our own newsroom has several. Their creations, they say, are both subconscious and random, usually geometric and not something they think much about. They also say that, despite conventional wisdom, they are listening pretty intently while the subconscious impulse takes over.

"It's like a release outlet and it actually helps me sometimes, thinking of things that someone hasn't thought of yet," says Charlie Ponger, general manager of interactive for Southern Connecticut Newspapers, Inc. "I'm always thinking of things from a different perspective, not thinking of anything new about drawing."

Joe Fucigna, coordinator of the art department at Norwalk Community College and a member of the Stamford Loft Artists Association, says he consciously draws and subconsciously doodles.

"Your mind is relaxed when doodling and you can have the opportunity to stumble upon ideas," he says. "But you also look at people who doodle and they doodle the same thing all the time so you wonder if they stay within a familiar territory."

He doesn't believe his own doodling has led to any grand ideas in his art career but thinks it must provide seedlings. "If people looked at their doodling and looked at it just for the sake of visual thinking, they might be surprised at how well they do it. In many ways, we all draw. It's one of the first things we do as children."

Doodling is a right-side-of-the-brain activity, the half associated with creation and intuition. What is important about ride-side exercises, according to the author Revoir, is that they temporarily shut out the more analytical and regimented left side. "Doodling is such a great thing for people who don't think they are creative to be creative," Revoir says. "The truth is that we are all creative but we don't take creative risks and we don't try out avenues of creative expression. People say, 'I'm not creative,' or 'I'm not an artist.' That's just not true. We're creative about how we get out of bed in the morning."

Fucigna also likes the freedom it represents. "A lot of it has to do with pattern and repetition but I don't think there's any pressure on anybody because doodles aren't thought of as anything important," he says.

They can be important to someone like Mike Kahlowsky. He is certified by the National Society for Graphology, works for Handwriting Profiles International in Florida and has studied writing habits for 10 years. He says random sketches can tell as much about a person as his penmanship.

"When you find someone doodling, it can because they find it a fun method to relax and release energy," he says. "They are doing things on their own terms and there's no rules."

By examining a mindless drawing, Kahlowsky can derive information about someone's physical condition, health, whether they are under the influence and their integrity level.

For instance, he says someone who doodles heavy-handedly isn't releasing enough energy through natural ways, or is stressed. Round shapes typically indicate an easygoing, flexible personality, while straight lines signify an analytical, rigid mind. Someone who draws the same thing over and over might be compulsive. Boxes are often a sign of organization.

"There's a lot of different angles you dive into when you analyze a doodle," he says. "It's not linear, it's the overall picture."

It might also be a matter of stunted creative development.

Revoir says that during adolescence, people trade their outlets of creative expression for a will to conform. Ask a 4-year-old if she can sing or paint, and the answer will invariably be yes. Ask a 15-year-old and the opposite response is almost a given. The author believes this has to do with good intentions gone awry. A youngster may paint a purple tree only to be told trees aren't supposed to be purple.

"We arrest ourselves at that place," she says. "If we ever go back and want to draw again, we will start again at that place where we left off. That's why most adults will draw a stick figure."

Copyright © 2004, Southern Connecticut Newspapers, Inc.

Medical study preliminary results indicate five of the six handwriting traits measured show positive relationship

Medical study preliminary results indicate five of the six handwriting traits measured show positive relationship
June 28, 2003    by:   HandwritingProfiles.com

The following handwriting traits were all independently evaluated against the (MS) Diagnosis Category:

  • Rhythm
  • Legibility
  • Stroke Quality
  • Tremor
  • Irregularity
  • Form

Based on the "ordinal data" that was being measured, the Spearman Rank-Order Correlation Coefficient was determined for a bivariate set of paired XY rankings. The results were as follows:

MS Diagnosis Category (x-axis) / Rhythm (y-axis): Correlation Coefficient = -0.0431
MS Diagnosis Category (x-axis) / Legibility (y-axis): Correlation Coefficient = 0.0922
MS Diagnosis Category (x-axis) / Stroke Quality (y-axis): Correlation Coefficient = 0.1669
MS Diagnosis Category (x-axis) / Tremor (y-axis): Correlation Coefficient = 0.1302
MS Diagnosis Category (x-axis) / Irregularity (y-axis): Correlation Coefficient = 0.0963 MS Diagnosis Category (x-axis) / Form (y-axis): Correlation Coefficient = 0.1827

Due to the relatively small same size of n=54, the five of the six independent studies that proved a positive correlation were not significant. If the trends that were found in this study continue and the aggregated subject size expands from 54 samples (for all the studies except the "Stroke Quality" which only had 35 valid samples) to between 100 and 150 samples, two to three of the six handwriting physiological aspects that were measured would prove to show a significant linear relationship with the change in MS Diagnosis Category.

If a significant relationship can be established for any of these handwriting characteristics, the next step would be focused on a predictive study such as Logistic Regression.

Medical study focused on correlating physiological traits in handwriting with physical/neurological illness approved

Medical study focused on correlating physiological traits in handwriting with physical/neurological illness approved
September 25, 2002    by:   HandwritingProfiles.com

A project looking to correlate physiological traits in handwriting with physical/neurological illness was approved on September 25, 2002 by the Institutional Review Board for Research with Human Subjects (IRB).

The research will take place in 2002 and 2003.

The principal investigator is Dr. Jennie Q. Lou, M.D., M.Sc.
The co-investigator is Michael S. Kahlowsky, NSG Certified Handwriting Analyst

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