Five currently popular rosy ideas about boosting your and others' success, all of which are contradicted by good evidence: brain training, grit, growth mindset, deliberate practice, and bilingual advantage. http://www.unz.com/jthompson/boost-your-intelligence/ … orig articlehttps://psyarxiv.com/sv9pz
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Replying to @KirkegaardEmil
This is consistent with an idea that I have failed to demonstrate experimentally many times: people want answers/solutions to problems that are "controllable." People don't want biological explanations for success because they are (currently) useless for self-improvement.
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Replying to @ImHardcory
You failed to demonstrate that people prefer answers that lead to plausible interventions? That would be a surprising null finding. In this case, the situation is fairly obvious: lower tier parents give their kids lower tier names, and others notice this and use as prior.
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Replying to @KirkegaardEmil
Yes, I thought it would help explain why vaccines are an attractive explanation for autism. Easier to control than genes. Have a few studies where I attempted to manipulate controllability of solution and measure preference for solution with no consistent effect.
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Replying to @ImHardcory @KirkegaardEmil
This idea is intriguing. Nice creative thought here.1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
Power failure of the studies? I think Noah Carl and @nathancofnas have written on the topic.
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