The phrase TAP or trigger action planning has a specific meaning. If I chat with other people at my dojo, I can say: “You should make a TAP for the habit you want to adapt.” Most people outside of this community wouldn’t understand that sentence as it refers to a specific CFAR concept.
Having posts that explain core vocabulary of this community like “TAPs” and that can be linked is valuable.
As far as the actual content goes I didn’t know that there was a study that showed that TAPs aren’t helpful to people with socially prescribed perfectionism is useful knowledge that might change how I react if I talk to a person who falls in that cluster.
Information on the discussion board is front-facing for some time, then basically dies. Yes, you can use the search to find it again, but that becomes less reliable as discussion of TAPs increases. It’s also antithetical to the whole idea behind TAP.
The wiki is better suited for acting as a repository of information.
The phrase TAP or trigger action planning has a specific meaning. If I chat with other people at my dojo, I can say: “You should make a TAP for the habit you want to adapt.” Most people outside of this community wouldn’t understand that sentence as it refers to a specific CFAR concept.
Having posts that explain core vocabulary of this community like “TAPs” and that can be linked is valuable.
As far as the actual content goes I didn’t know that there was a study that showed that TAPs aren’t helpful to people with socially prescribed perfectionism is useful knowledge that might change how I react if I talk to a person who falls in that cluster.
Fair enough, though I disagree with the idea of using the discussion board as a repository of information.
Why?
This approach also has the advantage that different people can contribute their own thoughts and learnings around the concept.
Information on the discussion board is front-facing for some time, then basically dies. Yes, you can use the search to find it again, but that becomes less reliable as discussion of TAPs increases. It’s also antithetical to the whole idea behind TAP.
The wiki is better suited for acting as a repository of information.
LessWrong isn’t simply a discussion board. It’s a blog/discussion board hybrid. Various posts do get read long after they are written.
Posting here to give empirical evidence to this statement
Such as this one!