wow, I really couldnt choose between 'situations not personality' and'other peoples expectations' went for expectations in the end though as it really does make sense if you think about it... a very inspiring article
Curious tho how EVEN the scores tend to be. for my own response, I had trouble deciding between two top contenders, and I wonder how many others were likewise ready to vote but tossing a coin on the last elimination round thereby smoothing out the curve.
Does Social Psychology say anything about the fact that (as of now, anyway) the study that came first got the most votes? Would its score have been different if it was in the number 4 position?
Or does it reflect that perhaps not everyone read all 10 articles? Can you tell us what proportion of the stories had the "Read on" links clicked, and how that compares to the poll results?
wow, I really couldnt choose between 'situations not personality' and'other peoples expectations' went for expectations in the end though as it really does make sense if you think about it... a very inspiring article
Curious tho how EVEN the scores tend to be. for my own response, I had trouble deciding between two top contenders, and I wonder how many others were likewise ready to vote but tossing a coin on the last elimination round thereby smoothing out the curve.
Does Social Psychology say anything about the fact that (as of now, anyway) the study that came first got the most votes? Would its score have been different if it was in the number 4 position?
Or does it reflect that perhaps not everyone read all 10 articles? Can you tell us what proportion of the stories had the "Read on" links clicked, and how that compares to the poll results?