Some research suggests that a child’s ability to delay gratification is a good predictor of achievement later in life. The research is based on some famous experiments in which children were left in a room alone with sweets and told that if they resisted until the experimenters returned, they would be rewarded with even more sweets. Via EatMeDaily here is a really cute video by Steve V of the marshmallow test.
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September 15, 2009 at 12:23 am
Thorfinn
I hate these studies. What’s the predictive power? The R-squared? P-value? Coefficient values? This could literally mean anything from “There is a one percentage point difference in life outcomes” to “virtually all life outcomes can be predicted at birth.”
What’s ultimately more important than the mere fact there is a correlation between early and late life outcomes is the economic significance and causal mechanisms.
September 23, 2009 at 6:53 pm
Marshmallow Test on Tape « Modeled Behavior
[…] ~ September 23rd, 2009 in Economics Via Cheap Talk, a cute video of the famous marshmallow test. Kids are left in a room with a marshmallow and […]