• Sundray@lemmus.orgOP
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    23 hours ago

    The Stanford marshmallow experiment was a study on delayed gratification in 1970 led by psychologist Walter Mischel, a professor at Stanford University.[1] In this study, a child was offered a choice between one small but immediate reward, or two small rewards if they waited for a period of time.”

    The joke is that in this version of the experiment, the child isn’t being tested, the marshmallow is. And in this case, the marshmallow has decided to eat this one child instead of waiting until later, when it would have been allowed to eat two children.

    • anachrohack@lemmy.world
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      23 hours ago

      Oh shit, I totally didn’t see that the marshmallow was biting the kid. The image is so small it looked like a power outlet behind him on the wall

    • xorollo@leminal.space
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      22 hours ago

      Thanks. I didn’t see the marshmallow chewing on the kids arm till I read this then zoomed in. Lol

    • i_love_FFT@jlai.lu
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      23 hours ago

      I always found this study to be lacking…

      5 minutes is not worth 1 marshmallow. Marshmallows are not that good, so one is way enough. As a kid, I could never trust adults who wanted to limit good things. Who’s to say the strange adult in a white coat would really bring a 2nd marshmallow? What if they actually remove the marshmallow instead?

      In short, it can only separate kids in two groups: the blind followers of authority and the other ones.

      • TheFlopster@lemmy.world
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        22 hours ago

        This is what I’ve said since I learned of this experiment. I’m only waiting for the second marshmallow if BOTH of the following statements are true:

        1. I want two marshmallows.

        2. I trust the adult to keep his word.

      • Kichae@lemmy.ca
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        20 hours ago

        As a kid, I could never trust adults who wanted to limit good things.

        Guess what? This effect has been found in other experiments!

        The marshmallow experiment is one of those that self-help gurus and LinkedIn ‘influencers’ love to peddle as being meaningful, in no small part because it tells people who had lucky upbringings that they are inherently better than others, and not just a product of their environment. But when it’s actually examined critically, it falls apart.

      • u/lukmly013 💾 (lemmy.sdf.org)@lemmy.sdf.org
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        18 hours ago

        Time to calculate how much 1 marshmallow is worth in time considering minimum wage in my country.

        Let’s begin.
        Minimum wage in Slovakia is €4.69/h.
        An 80g bag of Jojo marshmallows is €1.19 at Tesco.
        It claims one portion is 3 marshmallows which is 11.7g.
        Therefore 1 marshmallow is 3.9g.
        Therefore there are 20 - 21 marshmallows in the bag.
        Therefore 1 marshmallow costs roughly €0.058.
        €4.69/h is €0.078/m or €0.0013/s.
        Therefore, 1 marshmallow costs roughly 44.62 seconds of work time.

        Well, assuming there are no taxes. So maybe something close to 1 minute per marshmallow. Although… maybe if we add total time, including time you’re not working… 12 marshmallows an hour, 288 a day, 2016 a week, 8640 a month. That’s €501.12/month.

        Based on this the minimum monthly wage after taxes and all is €661.80/month.

        Conclusion: It is worth the 5 minutes.

      • riquisimo@lemmy.world
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        17 hours ago

        They should have done cookies instead.

        And sweeten the deal. 1 cookie or a BAG… Yeah, give me a BAG it cookies, yeah. I’m an ADULT.

        • Flax@feddit.uk
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          20 hours ago

          I think we were also given 3. We were given one at the start of the small sunday school class, and if we had it at the end of it, we were given three more. So the difference was that if you ate it early, you still would have had to wait anyway.

          • Genius@lemmy.zip
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            13 hours ago

            Won’t it melt from the heat in your hand/pocket? I ain’t having chocolate stains in my pocket, I’m eating it now.