Aprīlis 10., 2015


Previous Entry Add to Memories Tell A Friend Next Entry
12:40
I pointed out to the instructors that [..] poor performance was typically followed by improvement and good performance by deterioration, without any help from either praise or punishment.
The discovery I made on that day wasw that the flight instructors were trapped in an unfortunate contingency: because they punished cadets when performance was poor, they were mostly rewarded by a subsequent improvement, even if punishment was actually ineffective. Furthermore, the instructors were not alone in their predicament. I had stumbled onto a significant fact of the human condition: the feedback to which life exposes us is perverse. Because we tend to be nice to other people when they please us and nasty when they do not, we are statistically punished for being nice and rewarded for being nasty.

/Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow

(3 teica | man šķiet, ir tā...)

Comments:


[User Picture]
From:[info]extranjero
Date:10. Aprīlis 2015 - 13:30
(Link)
Jauks citāts! :) Es to grāmatu biju lasījis pirms gadiem un jau esmu paspējis gandrīz visu aizmirst. Raksti vēl, kas liekas interesants.
From:[info]rindra
Date:10. Aprīlis 2015 - 20:16
(Link)
O, es arii tieshi lasu sho.
From:[info]ulzha
Date:10. Aprīlis 2015 - 21:38
(Link)
Jā, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regression_toward_the_mean

"we are statistically punished for being nice and rewarded for being nasty" tikai īstermiņā, to jau var pārvārīt...
honeybee -

> Jaunākais
> Arhivētais
> Draugi
> Par sevi


> Go to Top
Sviesta Ciba