2017-03-05 at 6:44 AM UTC
I want to set up a vending machine with the same product for every single option and see which sections sell out first
If there are 8 columns (1-8) and 8 rows (A-H), which ones do you think would sell out first?
2017-03-05 at 6:48 AM UTC
X X X X X X X X
X X X X X X X X
X X X X X X X X
X X X X X X X X
X X X X X X X X
X X X X X X X X
X X X X X X X X
X X X X X X X X
have all of these permalinked on an otherwise blank webpage
have a counter for how many clicks each point gets
2017-03-05 at 7:57 AM UTC
The rows in the middle you nitwit. There have already been studies done on the order of selection. Read a damn book for once.
2017-03-05 at 8:18 AM UTC
I'd probably pick the bottom row on order to remove the amount that my drink will be shaken
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2017-03-05 at 8:19 AM UTC
Originally posted by Hash Slinging Slasher
I'd probably pick the bottom row on order to remove the amount that my drink will be shaken
i H8 u
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2017-03-05 at 8:55 AM UTC
Yeah, honestly I'd expect A1 to be exhausted first. It might be interesting if you flipped the order so A1 was top right, like does our impulse to move in page-order override the appeal of first ordinal member? I kinda think so because of the deliberately low-cognition model of the vending machine (arrange items in an order physically similar to the input controls) invites a minimal intellectual investment. Maintaining the physical transformation requires less cognition than character recognition, parse, order, make judgment call, coordinate physical action, but you'd have to try it to find out.
2017-03-05 at 8:56 AM UTC
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2017-03-05 at 8:57 AM UTC
now we have to figure out why it matters
your writing style is verbose and convoluted as usual
you're saying you start moving you eyes on text before you comprehend the text, so it's less "cognitively stressful" to only do the first step.
2017-03-05 at 8:59 AM UTC
Originally posted by Lanny
Yeah, honestly I'd expect A1 to be exhausted first. It might be interesting if you flipped the order so A1 was top right, like does our impulse to move in page-order override the appeal of first ordinal member? I kinda think so because of the deliberately low-cognition model of the vending machine (arrange items in an order physically similar to the input controls) invites a minimal intellectual investment. Maintaining the physical transformation requires less cognition than character recognition, parse, order, make judgment call, coordinate physical action, but you'd have to try it to find out.
Lol
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2017-03-05 at 9:01 AM UTC
I bet Lanny is one of those people with a very specific and subtle learning disability.
2017-03-05 at 9:01 AM UTC
IDK, maybe it means we should arrange the contents of vending machines in such a way that the highest profit margin items should exist in the locations that have highest mental priority. But then one wonders if some kind of ML approach wouldn't be able to make a reliable deduction in considerably less time than it would take to come to an answer via some route of experimental psychology and what machine learning might indicate in terms of corporate interests diverging from traditionally academic research. Research is expensive, paying some intern to implement and tune epsilon greedy for the hundredth time isn't.
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