Behavioural Spectator (@beh_spectator) 's Twitter Profile
Behavioural Spectator

@beh_spectator

The Behavioural Spectator is an in-depth look at applying behavioural science to sport

ID: 1697703277247229952

calendar_today01-09-2023 20:09:52

9 Tweet

8 Followers

111 Following

Behavioural Spectator (@beh_spectator) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Loved the piece by Matthew Syed this week in The Times and The Sunday Times outlining what VARs can learn from the pilot who landed on the hudson river. We had similar thoughts when Arsenal were victims of similar communication issues last February... behaviouralspectator.com/post/football-…

Lionel Page (@page_eco) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Why reason fails: Our modern lives are teeming with technology, informed by scientific understanding. But at the same time, irrational beliefs, from superstition to vaccine hesitancy, are still widespread. How is it possible? 👉Reason is likely not the tool we think it is. A 🧵

Why reason fails: Our modern lives are teeming with technology, informed by scientific understanding. But at the same time, irrational beliefs, from superstition to vaccine hesitancy, are still widespread. How is it possible?
👉Reason is likely not the tool we think it is. A 🧵
Lionel Page (@page_eco) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Did a new example of Berkson's paradox just drop? CEO attractiveness and shareholder returns are negatively correlated 👉If CEOs are selected both for their managerial skills and for their good looks, these two variables will be negatively correlated among CEOs ht Sam Glover

Did a new example of Berkson's paradox just drop?
CEO attractiveness and shareholder returns are negatively correlated
👉If CEOs are selected both for their managerial skills and for their good looks, these two variables will be negatively correlated among CEOs
ht <a href="/sam_atis/">Sam Glover</a>
Lionel Page (@page_eco) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Because talking to each other seems easy to us, we typically underappreciate the amazing cognitive feats we achieve in our everyday conversations. A 🧵

Because talking to each other seems easy to us, we typically underappreciate the amazing cognitive feats we achieve in our everyday conversations. A 🧵