of Duke University has enlisted candy-seekers to learn about the ways that free goods affect kids’ decision making.
Here was the key: the trick-or-treaters were told that no one else would check the cup. Only they would know the true number on the top of the die. But to the researchers’ surprise, when trick-or-treaters answered the costume questions first — that is, when they were primed to think about their costumed identity — the pattern flipped: kids dressed as good guys claimed to have rolled a six 59% percent of the time, while those dressed as bad guys said they got a six 47% of the time.
The children in bad-guy costumes, on the other hand, might have been less inclined to cheat because they may have felt that they were being watched and judged, Tasoff and his colleagues wrote.
Depending on where you live in the US, better have the kids dress warmly, as this is one of the coldest Halloweens on record for much of the country. So many cold temp records have been broken - snow, as well - for the month of October. Isn't it weird that LAT's has no news?
🎃🎃🎃🎃👻
Let the kids have fun !
Trick or treat is too binary. I fuckin love this generation😂
Bitch what
Another hard hitting news piece from the el Segundo times.
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