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@savsvlf:
savsvlf
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Friday 14 February 2025 06:54:01 GMT
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드디어 결혼합니다.. #치킨 #하하핫치킨 #60계치킨
Social proof drives our actions online and offline. According to studies, how much people applause dictates how likely we are to applaud. You can see how this works online as well. When there’s a lot of social proof, people tend to follow the crowd. According to livescience: “The louder the applause — indicating that more people are clapping — the more likely you are to join in, according to the study published today (June 18) in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface. To get people clapping, the scientists assembled groups of 13 to 20 students into audiences and had them watch a brief presentation by another student. The audience was told the presenter was a volunteer, so they should give that person a hand after the talk. Unbeknownst to the participants, however, the researchers were filming them, recording exactly when they started and stopped clapping. The experiment was repeated six times, with the same presentation but different audiences. The main discovery, Mann told LiveScience, is that neither your immediate neighbors' behavior nor the quality of the presentation determines the spread of clapping. Instead, clapping built upon itself. "People started to pick up the rate at which they clapped when they heard more and more people in the room clapping," Mann said. On average, the first person started clapping 2.1 seconds after the presentation ended, with the whole room joining in by 2.9 seconds. The applause (from start to finish) lasted an average of 6.1 seconds. "There wasn't a tipping point," at which a crucial number of people started clapping so everyone joined in, Mann said. "The social pressure to clap just increased in proportion to the number of people who had already done so." #socialproof #marketingpsychology #tippingpoint #influence
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