Poll poll
#1
Posted 2014-November-23, 19:21
I'm never sure what to do then, since it depends on the type of data the OP wants to gather. Clearly my opinion is now compromised, so perhaps I should just delete the vote and not resubmit. But then, once I've updated based on new information, my vote is still data to be weighed against the votes of anyone who didn't agree with the argument. But also if you're trying to get a feeling for how many others would have chosen a particular action, then my initial vote might even be worth more, particularly if I've mainly shifted my view because of the calibre of people who disagree rather than because someone's pointed out a key factor I hadn't thought of.
So which is the most helpful action?
#2
Posted 2014-November-23, 20:13
Pure opinions, even from the elite, I leave alone even if I will change my opinion in the future and even if others will see my stupid choice.
#3
Posted 2014-November-24, 02:05
If it's just a bad choice, I don't edit, even if I change my mind about it later on, from reading the replies.
#4
Posted 2014-November-24, 02:14
Jinksy, on 2014-November-23, 19:21, said:
Yep, this is why I do not change my vote when it was what I genuinely thought at the time. I think it is useful for people to see that there are others who misjudged, or had the same thought process as them, and then have been enlightened by the replies.
#5
Posted 2014-November-24, 03:30
Include a I am not an expert option or similar pollsters!
#6
Posted 2014-November-24, 04:50
Jinksy, on 2014-November-23, 19:21, said:
- You shouldn't change your vote simply because of the number or calibre of those with a different view. You should bow to authority only in areas of relative ignorance, which you don't want to explore further. If you want to learn Bridge (as I do), then you should try to understand the arguments of other players', not simply take their conclusions on trust.
- You should change your vote when the arguments of others convince you. Changing your vote shows that you are bright enough to recognise and correct mistakes. It's good for the soul. Also, I think the priority for most pollsters is to find the best answer, not simply how many made the same mistake that they did. If an OP wants to know how others rate his action, he should include it among other options and ask players to award them marks out of ten.
- When you create a poll, you should click the "Public Poll" box so that pollees can see how each other voted. In particular, you can see how experts voted.
#7
Posted 2014-November-24, 07:22
nige1, on 2014-November-24, 04:50, said:
- You should change your vote when the arguments of others convince you. Changing your vote is a recognition that you are bright enough to recognise and correct mistakes. It's good for the soul. Also, I think the priority for most pollsters is to find the best answer, not simply how many made the same mistake that they did. If an OP wants to know how others rate his action, he should include it among other options and ask players to award them marks out of ten.
Depends on what the poll is. If it's something like "Would you pass/pull/raise/double, etc" it's OK to leave the original vote in, IMO, because that is what you would have done before reading the comments. If it's something like "What is the correct play here: small to the T, hook blah" something that is not a personal choice but rather a technical issue then I understand your argument. Yeah leaving a bad vote in is not helpful for such polls and it might be better to change it when you see it was wrong. Otherwise, by applying the logic "I am bright enough to admit my mistakes" to all polls we could simply read the whole thread, form an opinion, and then vote. Why vote, read, update?
#8
Posted 2014-November-24, 07:30
-gwnn
#9
Posted 2014-November-24, 10:28
nige1, on 2014-November-24, 04:50, said:
- You shouldn't change your vote simply because of the number or calibre of those with a different view. You should bow to authority only in areas of relative ignorance, which you don't want to explore further. If you want to learn Bridge (as I do), then you should try to understand the arguments of other players', not simply take their conclusions on trust.
As a general rule, I obviously want a reason to change my mind. But realistically, not all posts go very deep into the reasoning, and it's not such a black&white thing - sometimes people will make a superficial argument, sometimes in moderate depth. And the person posting it might be PhantomSac, or a lesser but significantly stronger player than you, or a group of people of similar ability. Other peoples' opinion carries evidential weight, and if you never update your beliefs because it, then you're not being epistemically sound - especially in a game like bridge where mathematical proof of any claim is near-impossible.
That said, there's a difference between changing my mind and changing my vote, and they don't have exactly the same purpose. One is for my benefit, the other is for the askers'.
Quote
Yeah, I only recently noticed this option. I'm trying to remember to use it in all polls (evidently I'm forgetting quite a lot ^).
#10
Posted 2014-November-24, 11:08
Don't get me wrong, I am not saying that we should always announce the change of mind for the record, however I have been going through old topics lately and making a collection of comments by same people who are arguing totally the opposite of what they said in the past, including myself, and I find it quite amusing how strongly one can argue both sides of the argument in different times . Not only that but can actually be mean to another poster for arguing the option that we advocated in the past.
"It's only when a mosquito lands on your testicles that you realize there is always a way to solve problems without using violence!"
"Well to be perfectly honest, in my humble opinion, of course without offending anyone who thinks differently from my point of view, but also by looking into this matter in a different perspective and without being condemning of one's view's and by trying to make it objectified, and by considering each and every one's valid opinion, I honestly believe that I completely forgot what I was going to say."
#11
Posted 2014-November-24, 11:18
What is baby oil made of?