After reading Stuart Sutherland’s “Irrationality”, I’m starting to think I should discard altogether my impressions of what makes the difference between good and bad days in favour of a notebook and a real regression analysis. Is that what you’re doing? If so, what is the correlation?
Be careful about your temporal order here: it’s possible that when you feel a bad mood coming on, you respond by then eating more sugary food in order to try and fight the unhappiness off.
Messing up the order of this particular problem is a mistake I’ve made myself.
After reading Stuart Sutherland’s “Irrationality”, I’m starting to think I should discard altogether my impressions of what makes the difference between good and bad days in favour of a notebook and a real regression analysis. Is that what you’re doing? If so, what is the correlation?
The way I talked about it implied more precision than I’ve actually got.
The “I don’t care” internal monologue only seems to happen after sugar overdose, but I haven’t been keeping records.
Be careful about your temporal order here: it’s possible that when you feel a bad mood coming on, you respond by then eating more sugary food in order to try and fight the unhappiness off.
Messing up the order of this particular problem is a mistake I’ve made myself.