If half of an airline's flights are full and half are empty, passengers will complain that the flights are full every time, contrasting with the assessment of the crew who report that half of the flights are empty. How do you call this effect/paradox? (I forgot)
The same effect explains that if you have an average number of friends (= popularity), more than half of your friends are more popular than you.
Or when your doctor tells you you're in average physical condition but each time you go cycling, most cyclists you come across are faster than you (because the fast cyclists are also the ones who spend the most time on the roads and are encountered disproportionately).
@mjambon You are describing quite a few things.. namely survivorship bias, and regression to the mean are most notable.
I suspectit may not be obvious why its survivorship bias.
The bicycle example lines up with this because the best cyclists survive the exervise longer, thus you have a samping bias towards those who survive the longest on the road,
Same with the friends examples... The most popular people tend to survive more friendships, meaning more popular people are more likely to have friends (including you).
@mjambon You may also be thinking the Cauchy-schwartz inequality, which describes the math behind the scenario re: friendship you mentioned. That is called the friendship paradox.
@mjambon Is it obvious why i mentioned regression to the mean, or should i elaborate on that?
@freemo no, I didn't get the connection with regression to the mean.
By the way there are so many terms you may have been thinking of please stop me if I actually hit ont he term you were trying to remember.
You were also describing "representativeness heuristic". Im sure there is a wikipedia page on that if you want to look it up. Basically just means you think someone is representative of the norm when it is not, It is a psychological concept not a statistical one as far as I know.
@mjambon If you can give me more insight on the term you are trying to remember I might be able to help you come up with it. I can think of sooooo many concepts you kinda touched on in some sense.
So many selection biases come to mind for example.
@freemo the original example was a "clever" post by a shitposting page on Facebook, something like this:
"It's not possible that every time we call your customer service you're experiencing a higher amount of calls than usual".
@freemo i.e. not something I need for urgent or professional purposes 🙂
@mjambon This in no was dissuades me from wanting to figure out what your thinking of... this is kind of a treasure trove of fun logical/statistical ideas...
Honestly i think you may just be thinking of the term "confirmation bias"?
I actually responded to this out of thread.
Yea typically its used to describe a common seemingly obviously true assumption that is wrong, but typically resolvable.
But that is not a "real" or formal definition of a paradox in logic, which would be a **self-contradictory** statement that is neither true nor fase, and is generally non-sensical like "this statement is false" or "I will only speak lies"
@freemo I skimmed the Wikipedia article about representativeness heuristic. Seems to connect to the notion I had of stereotypes vs. averages.