For me, it may be that the toilet paper roll needs to have the open end away from the wall. I don’t want to reach under the roll to take a piece! That’s ludicrous!

That or my recent addiction to correcting people when they use “less” when they should use “fewer”

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15 points

I have given up on “steep learning curve”. A learning curve is proficiency on the Y axis against time on the X. A steep learning curve indicates something that is learned very quickly. A shallow learning curve is something that takes a long time to master. See Ebbinghaus 1885.

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23 points

I always view that one as meaning that you must learn a lot about something in a short amount of time in order to use it effectively, where shallow learning curve, in a positive context, would mean you can make it useful without knowing all that much about its full capabilities.

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8 points

That’s my take too. Short for “this requires you to follow a steep learning curve, even if it is not easy to do so.”

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2 points

Whatever that is, it’s not a learning curve. Ebbinghaus defined it in his classic work.

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5 points

It’s learning over time, with proficiency being the area under the line. It’s describing having to learn a lot to achieve the same proficiency compared to something with a shallow learning curve.

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2 points

Ebbinghaus didn’t integrate areas under the acquisition curve. He wasn’t a mathematical psychologist.

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1 point

That’s a great point!

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1 point
*

All these replies talking about graphs and I’m here imagining for years having to pedal up a steep hill requiring lots of effort like a pleb.

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2 points

That’s where the confusion comes from, conflating the experience of walking up a steep hill vs an acquisition curve.

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