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Your Name May Tweak Your Destiny
Initials may make or break grades, baseball
strikeouts and more.
By Miranda Hitti WebMD Medical News
Your name may help put you at the head of the
class or leave you in the strikeout column, a
new study shows.
The researchers report that MBA students whose
first or last names start with the letters A or
B tend to make better grades than those whose
names start with C or D.
What's more, Major League baseball players whose
names begin with the letter K strike out more
often than those whose names don’t start with K,
the letter used to record strikeouts.
So say Leif Nelson, PhD, and Joseph Simmons,
PhD, in December's edition of Psychological
Science.
Nelson works at the Rady School of Management at
the University of California at San Diego.
Simmons works at Yale University's School of
Management.
Together, they studied the effect that certain
initials have on certain measurements of
success.
They also found that law school applicants whose
names began with A or B were more likely to get
into top-ranked law schools than those with
other initials.
What gives with the name game?
Nelson and Simmons suggest that people have a
subtle bias toward the letters in their
monogram.
"For example," they write, "Toby is more likely
to buy a Toyota, move to Toronto, and marry
Tonya than is Jack, who is more likely to buy a
Jaguar, move to Jacksonville, and marry Jackie."
So they reason that Christine may not find a C
grade quite so bad as Anna.
To test the theory, the researchers presented
online word puzzles to 225 people. Before
tackling the puzzles, the researchers mentioned
prizes for success or consolation prizes for
failures.
The prizes were labeled with a letter, such as
"Prize X."
When their first names matched the initial on
the consolation prize, they solved fewer
puzzles.
Of course, the researchers aren't suggesting
that anyone judge a person by their name.
There's no reason Kevin couldn't be a baseball
star. And the theory doesn't cover the whole
alphabet, so William and Zena aren't doomed to
bad grades.
© WebMD Inc. All rights reserved.
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"Toby is more likely to buy a Toyota, move to
Toronto, and marry Tonya than is Jack, who is more
likely to buy a Jaguar, move to Jacksonville, and
marry Jackie." |
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