Days when I go biking-or-something in the morning tend to be much better. The obvious question is whether there's a causal arrow, or a common cause.
So I'm going to do an experiment: for 30 days starting Nov 1*, I will:
in the morning, flip a coin:
heads: eat breakfast, start work
tails: exercise, eat breakfast, start work
in the evening, rate how energetic and competent I felt, from -25 to 25:
-20 is "day is pretty much a total loss"
-10 is "definitely somewhat dumber than usual"
0 is "eh, normal, I guess?"
10 is "definitely somewhat cleverer than usual"
20 is "on fire in a good way"
(I expect the distribution to look something like ~Normal(0, 10).)
At the end of the 30 days, this market resolves PROB(50 + avg rating from days I exercised - avg rating from days I didn't).
I won't bet in this market after the experiment begins.
* (skipping days when there's an obvious reason to, like "I'm sick" or "I have company"; this extends the end date of the experiment)
🏅 Top traders
# | Name | Total profit |
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1 | Ṁ6 | |
2 | Ṁ4 | |
3 | Ṁ2 | |
4 | Ṁ0 | |
5 | Ṁ0 |
Resolving this market a little early, at 25 data points instead of 30, because I expect the near future to have outsized noise, and I don't want to worry about how that affects my experimental validity.
If you feel ill-done-by by this, uh, let me know, I guess.
@EvanDaniel I got sick for a while! I'm currently at 25/30, so, should finish around Christmas. Here's my data so far:
