They're very low RPM and very low time in the air. Nothing I would accept for any decision worth flipping a coin for.
They're very low RPM and very low time in the air. Nothing I would accept for any decision worth flipping a coin for.
To me this kills the credibility of the entire study and of the authors.
Sure, there may be something to it, but people will have a very different thing on their mind unless they check the video, which I wouldn't have done without your prompting.
It's unlikely they don't understand how misleading it is.
And somehow I have the intuition a proper coin toss will not exhibit the same properties.
The whole purpose of tossing a coin is randomness, so of course you want high and fast.
If the result was that no matter how high and fast you throw is you get this bias, it would have been interesting.
But now you just say "if you do things badly, things don't work".
If you want to measure what happens specifically with high and fast coin tosses, then that’s an entirely different study to be done.