I never objected to “The employee review summary screen is displayed.” (Because seriously, what’s doing the displaying — an inanimate object: the monitor? The screen? “The screen displays the employee review summary screen” is a little redundant. Or how about a clever bit of code: the program? Or the programmer? “The program(mer) causes the employee review summary screen to be displayed…” Good lord. We could write it as a bit of a mystery: “The employee review summary screen appears on the monitor” but this always sounded, to me, like it was a ghost or something. Woooooo… “Out of the darkened pixels, there appears a summary screen, describing the employee. How does it know?” I will defer to house style on that one, either way, but some constructions do make me laugh. I prefer: “To access the employee summary screen, press the Enter key.” Because you and I know, if you don’t tell them — every damned time — to press that Enter key, they’ll just sit there staring at the darkened pixels, waiting for an apparition.