51 Cringeworthy Moments When People Celebrated Too Soon And Probably Regretted It (New Pics)
Nothing is over until it is truly over. Ask any sports fan and chances are, they will instantly recall a time their favorite team turned things around when it seemed impossible.
However, they probably also remember moments of painful regret after the same athletes lost what was supposed to be a sure win.
The subreddit r/PrematureCelebration is full of examples that prove one simple rule: keep going until the final whistle. It applies to other areas of life as well!
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Prematurely Celebrating A Legend’s Anniversary Of Passing
Oh but 150k and turning it to 5M you turn a blind eye or even assist with a "write off" let this man have his eggs and eat them too.
Psychologists Dr. Carmen Sanchez and Dr. David Dunning have found that hasty judgments are often just one part of larger error-prone patterns in behavior and thinking.
"These patterns have costs," they write. "People who tend to make such jumps in their reasoning often choose a bet in which they have low chances of winning instead of one where their chances are much better."
Ye
Sanchez and Dunning looked at how over 600 people make decisions. Since most research on this kind of bias comes from studies of schizophrenia (where jumping to conclusions is common), they used a thinking game from that area.
In the game, players watched someone fishing from one of two lakes: one lake had mostly red fish, the other mostly gray. The fisher caught one fish at a time, and players had to decide which lake it was. Some players waited to see many fish before deciding, while others—the jumpers—made their choice after only one or two.
Well
"We also asked participants questions to learn more about their thought patterns," the researchers add. "We found that the fewer fish a player waited to see, the more errors that individual made in other types of beliefs, reasoning and decisions."
For example, the people who made decisions earlier were more likely to believe in conspiracy theories, like the idea that the Apollo moon landings were faked. They were also more likely to believe in paranormal claims and medical myths, such as the idea that health officials are hiding a link between cell phones and cancer.
Rudy Giuliani’s Tweet Bragging About Evading Service Of His Arizona Indictment. He Was Served 30 Minutes Later
Microsoft Employees Holding A Funeral For The iPhone Following The “Success” Of Their Windows Phone
Yeah 2020 sucked. Had to say goodbye to our 17 year old kittehs, isolate and then spend December with Covid before there was a vaccine because in spite of all the precautions my husband was an essential worker that works with a lot of hospital workers. 2021 was even worse but we survived and didn't divorce so that's good. 🤷🏻♀️😂
Jumpers made more mistakes than nonjumpers on problems that need careful thinking. Consider this brainteaser: “A baseball bat and ball cost $1.10 together. The bat costs $1 more than the ball. How much does the ball cost?”
Many people jumped to the answer of 10 cents, but a little thought shows the correct answer is five cents.
The Newspapers Were Hoping
Statements Don't Change Facts - Debate Or Not
In a gambling task, people who tended to jump were more likely to pick worse bets instead of ones where they had a better chance of winning. Jumpers focused on how many times a winning outcome could happen rather than looking at all the possible outcomes.
"Jumpers also had problems with overconfidence: on a quiz about U.S. civics, they overestimated the chance that their answers were right significantly more than other participants did—even when their answers were wrong," Sanchez and Dunning explain.
"The distinctions in decision quality between those who jumped and those who did not remained even after we took intelligence—based on a test of verbal intellect—and personality differences into account. Our data also suggested the difference was not merely the result of jumpers rushing through our tasks."
Not Today
Oh
So what’s going on? Why do some people jump to conclusions? The answer comes from a distinction psychological researchers make between two ways of thinking: automatic, called system 1, which includes ideas that come easily, quickly, and without effort; and controlled, or system 2, which involves conscious, careful, and deliberate reasoning.
"We used several assessments that teased apart how automatic our participants’ responses were and how much they engaged in deliberate analysis," Sanchez and Dunning say. "We found that jumpers and nonjumpers were equally swayed by automatic (system 1) thoughts. The jumpers, however, did not engage in controlled (system 2) reasoning to the same degree as nonjumpers."
Apparently she did win, just not the grand prize, and certainly not enough to quit one's job over.
It is system 2 thinking that helps people balance out mental errors and other biases from the quick, automatic system 1. In other words, jumpers were more likely to go with their first impression without thinking it through or questioning it. A weak system 2 approach was also linked more broadly to their problematic beliefs and poor reasoning.
Premature By Many Years
Greatest Tweet Of All Time
The good news is that there may be hope for the people in the pictures and other jumpers.
"Our work suggests that using training to target their biases can help people think more deliberatively," Sanchez and Dunning add.
"Specifically, we adapted a method called metacognitive training from schizophrenia research and created a self-paced online version of the intervention. In this training, participants are confronted with their own biases. For example, as part of our approach, we ask people to tackle puzzles, and after they make mistakes related to specific biases, these errors are called out so the participants can learn about the missteps and other ways of thinking through the problem at hand."
So if you take your time and think things through, you can control your overconfidence.
Celebrating A Premature Celebration Is An Other Premature Celebration
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Joe forgot to make a campaign contribution, buy Liberty Coin, or invent a fake award. You have to pay to play, Joe.
Tattoo Soon
This Whole Operation Is Noting But Premature Celebration
British Humour, Even In France Mid-Ww1
Farewell With Covid19 In Czech Republic On July 30th. One Of The Country With The Most Cases Per 1m Nowadays
Eastern Europe was one of the two places worst hit by COVID (the other being Peru-Mexico), with multiple waves, and multiple strains.
Commitment
Ray Chung Spent The Most In The Wellington Mayoral Campaign And Was So Confident Initially He Pre-Ordered A $90,000 Rolex Watch
Close But No Cigar
So Close
People Magazine Prematurely Celebrates Betty White's 100th Birthday
Saw This One Coming
He Deleted The Tweet
A Premature Celebration
Hallelujah
Perhaps Declaring Victory With Only 30% Of The Votes Counted Isn't Such A Great Idea
No More Delays! Ok Maybe One More
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Cue Reggie Miller Choke
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Friends Instagram Story As A Ravens Fan
I think that people from outside the US are expected to know what this means.
Back in the 90s the 49ers were so sure they were going back to another superbowl that they shipped everything down to NOLA before the NFC championship game. They lost. I'd been saying that whole week, 'well now they jinxed it'.
Back in the 90s the 49ers were so sure they were going back to another superbowl that they shipped everything down to NOLA before the NFC championship game. They lost. I'd been saying that whole week, 'well now they jinxed it'.
