- Joined
- Mar 16, 2020
You fuckers will argue over anything.
So why not discuss some noteworthy experiments?
The first in what may become a series if I'm not too lazy to post another.
The study pdf and link are included at the bottom.
The Dead Rat Hope Experiment
In 1957, Curt Richter a professor at John Hopkins, published his psychology experiment.
The experiment was simple. Take swimming jar (a cylindrical glass tank filled with water that prevents floating and escape). Throw a rat in. Record how long it takes for the rat to drown.
Which would fare better? Domesticated rats or recently captured white rats? Think about it.
Wild rats were much better swimmers and fitter. But also used to different circumstances.
How long did they last?
The domesticated rats first swam and explored the bucket. After that they kept swimming and eventually drowned.
3 rats drowned after 2 minutes.
9 rats drowned after days of swimming.
The wild rats fared differently.
34 rats all drowned after 2 minutes.
Curt wondered what role hope might play. So for the next part of the experiment he watched the rats until they seemed to give up and started to drown. Took them out. Held them. Immerse them in water and free them a couple of times. And then, as a proper scientist, he threw them back into the bucket of water and recorded how long it took until they drowned.
Both domesticated and wild rats afterward lasted for days the second time. Presumably because they now had the hope that they might be saved. Wild rats now typically lasted longer in accordance with initial expectation.
What can one learn from this experiment?
How can the knowledge gained be applied?
PS. What's not to love about a study that opens with the words "voodoo death"? Well besides all the horror deaths.
journals.lww.com
So why not discuss some noteworthy experiments?
The first in what may become a series if I'm not too lazy to post another.
The study pdf and link are included at the bottom.
The Dead Rat Hope Experiment
In 1957, Curt Richter a professor at John Hopkins, published his psychology experiment.
The experiment was simple. Take swimming jar (a cylindrical glass tank filled with water that prevents floating and escape). Throw a rat in. Record how long it takes for the rat to drown.
Which would fare better? Domesticated rats or recently captured white rats? Think about it.
Wild rats were much better swimmers and fitter. But also used to different circumstances.
How long did they last?
The domesticated rats first swam and explored the bucket. After that they kept swimming and eventually drowned.
3 rats drowned after 2 minutes.
9 rats drowned after days of swimming.
The wild rats fared differently.
34 rats all drowned after 2 minutes.
Curt wondered what role hope might play. So for the next part of the experiment he watched the rats until they seemed to give up and started to drown. Took them out. Held them. Immerse them in water and free them a couple of times. And then, as a proper scientist, he threw them back into the bucket of water and recorded how long it took until they drowned.
Both domesticated and wild rats afterward lasted for days the second time. Presumably because they now had the hope that they might be saved. Wild rats now typically lasted longer in accordance with initial expectation.
What can one learn from this experiment?
How can the knowledge gained be applied?
PS. What's not to love about a study that opens with the words "voodoo death"? Well besides all the horror deaths.

On the Phenomenon of Sudden Death in Animals and Man : Psychosomatic Medicine
a new area of interesting, exciting research. Copyright © 1957 by American Psychosomatic Society...
