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672,258 views • 1 year ago •via X (Twitter)

10 Comments

adhd arcade's profile picture
adhd arcade1 year ago

This is not chaos at all 😂 nor is it random

Gene 𝕏-er 🇺🇸🇷🇴's profile picture
Gene 𝕏-er 🇺🇸🇷🇴1 year ago

It’s random from the pov of each ball but the structure containing it and the forces acting on the each ball are predetermined. Most balls end up in the middle columns because they are pulled by gravity through the least resistance path. The odd balls dropping to the sides end up there because of interactions with other balls or the walls of the structure. In this simple simulation, the middle is where balls want to be.

Andrew Moser's profile picture
Andrew Moser1 year ago

You can't fool me, that's Plinko

Sagacity Sweet Science's profile picture
Sagacity Sweet Science1 year ago

There is nothing random about anything… particularly in what he says about what’s random.

Nature Pictures's profile picture
Nature Pictures1 year ago

Galton Board👇#ad 1. Amazon- 2. Global-

kinaar's profile picture
kinaar1 year ago

Or are we seeing an interference pattern based on the input. If we inverted the triangle shape input, will we see an inverted bell curve?

José da Silva's profile picture
José da Silva1 year ago

Here we go. The thing is guided. The central release point, the geometry of the obstacles, the inclined lateral boundaries and the discrete end deposits ensure the path of the spheres. The Gaussian distribution is real, but it has been optimized for visual effect.

SkiSki's profile picture
SkiSki1 year ago

If each ball went down one at a time without interacting with one another would the result be the same?

Pamela's profile picture
Pamela1 year ago

The Galton Board, invented by Sir Francis Galton, visually demonstrates how random events can form a predictable bell curve, a principle seen in stock markets, casino odds, and even human genetics, showcasing the surprising order in chaos. 😳

Carlos De la Guardia's profile picture
Carlos De la Guardia1 year ago

Along the way, there are a bunch of branching points. You could modify those points to achieve many different distributions at the end. (e.g. make everything end up on the left edge) In a way, this is what genes and ideas do: they take a somewhat random process and guide it.

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