zlacker

[return to "Being good at coding competitions correlates negatively with job performance"]
1. jaredt+g2[view] [source] 2020-12-15 01:21:27
>>azhenl+(OP)
This is Berkson's Paradox. Even if coding competition performance correlates positively with job performance in the general population (which it certainly does, given that most people can't code), selecting for this attribute in the hiring process leads to a negative correlation among those hired.

Great write-up by Erik Bernhardsson, CTO of Better, here: https://erikbern.com/2020/01/13/how-to-hire-smarter-than-the....

◧◩
2. mcquee+e8[view] [source] 2020-12-15 02:13:23
>>jaredt+g2
Agree that it's Berkson's Paradox.

Just because I see some stronger-worded rebuttals in this thread, I want to point out that just because this is true (it is Berkson's Paradox), that does not mean it cannot be a valuable observation. As the author pointed out, for example, it might mean that this attribute is overweighted in hiring, which is something worth considering.

[go to top]