Thanks for explaining your view! I don’t really have super strong views here, so don’t want to labour the point, but just thought I’d share my intuition for where I’m coming from. For me it makes sense to have a thresholds at the places because it does actually carve up the buckets of reactions better than the linear scale suggests.
For example, some people feel weird rating something really low and so they “express dislike” by rating it 6⁄10. So to me the lowest scorers and the 6/10ers are actually probably have more similar experiences than their linear score suggests. I claim this is driven by weird habits/something psychological of how people are used to rating things.
I think there’s a similar thing at the 7/8/9 distinction. I think when people think something is “okay” they just rate it 7⁄10. But when someone is actually impressed by something they rate it 9⁄10, which is only 2 points more but actually captures a quite different sentiment. From experience also I’ve noticed some people use 9⁄10 in place of 10⁄10 because they just never give anything 10⁄10 (e.g they understand what it means for something to be 10⁄10 differently to others)
The short of it is that I claim people don’t seem to use the linear scale as an actual linear scale , and so it makes sense to normalise things with the thresholds, and I claim that the thresholds are at the right place mostly just from my (very limited) experience
Thanks for explaining your view! I don’t really have super strong views here, so don’t want to labour the point, but just thought I’d share my intuition for where I’m coming from. For me it makes sense to have a thresholds at the places because it does actually carve up the buckets of reactions better than the linear scale suggests.
For example, some people feel weird rating something really low and so they “express dislike” by rating it 6⁄10. So to me the lowest scorers and the 6/10ers are actually probably have more similar experiences than their linear score suggests. I claim this is driven by weird habits/something psychological of how people are used to rating things.
I think there’s a similar thing at the 7/8/9 distinction. I think when people think something is “okay” they just rate it 7⁄10. But when someone is actually impressed by something they rate it 9⁄10, which is only 2 points more but actually captures a quite different sentiment. From experience also I’ve noticed some people use 9⁄10 in place of 10⁄10 because they just never give anything 10⁄10 (e.g they understand what it means for something to be 10⁄10 differently to others)
The short of it is that I claim people don’t seem to use the linear scale as an actual linear scale , and so it makes sense to normalise things with the thresholds, and I claim that the thresholds are at the right place mostly just from my (very limited) experience
Thanks for explaining! The guess about how people use the scale seems pretty plausible to me.