• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

What The Heck Is “Floating Duck Syndrome”? How Underestimating Effort Causes Harm

July 24, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

When a duck glides across the surface of a pond, it may appear to be effortlessly traversing the water, but in fact, its hidden feet are working overtime to keep it afloat. It is this contrast of outward calm and concealed exertion that inspired the term “floating duck syndrome”. Beyond the name, it has very little to do with ducks, instead describing how individuals advertise their achievements and simultaneously mask the struggles underpinning them.

Advertisement

In a recent study, scientists investigated the phenomenon, its consequences – it can have a huge impact on our health and well-being – and potential solutions.

“An increasingly common phenomenon in modern work and school settings is individuals taking on too many tasks and spending effort without commensurate rewards,” the study authors write. “Such an imbalance of efforts and rewards leads to myriad negative consequences, such as burnout, anxiety, and disease.”

Attempting to explain how this disparity arises, the researchers investigated “floating duck syndrome”, which describes the social pressure on individuals to celebrate their successes while hiding the toil behind them – much like a duck appearing to move effortlessly across the water. 

In doing so, these people create problematic social learning dynamics that lead others to underestimate the effort required to meet their goals. “This in turn leads individuals to both invest too much total effort and spread this effort over too many activities, reducing the success rate from each activity and creating effort-reward imbalances,” the team explain.

They built a mathematical model of social learning and, using students choosing activities as a case study, modeled a world wherein people try to judge how much effort to put into their work without full knowledge of how much effort it will take to succeed or how difficult the world is.

Advertisement

In the presence of visibility biases, such as people who appear effortlessly perfect, individuals in the model erroneously expected greater rewards for their effort than they actually received.

The team also identified that even if individuals had a greater absolute number of successes following increased overall effort, their success rate still went down, because they invested in too many activities.

“These findings matter. Modern life constantly calls upon us to decide how to divide our time and energy between different domains of life, including school, work, family, and leisure. How we allocate our time and energy between these domains, how many different activities we pursue in each domain, and what the resulting rewards are, have profound effects on our mental and physical health,” study author Erol Akçay of the University of Pennsylvania said in a statement.

And, perhaps unsurprisingly, the veneer of perfection that is presented to us on social media isn’t helping things. “Floating duck syndrome is often exacerbated by social media platforms and institutional public relations, which make successes more visible but not necessarily failures or the effort spent to achieve successes,” Akçay added.

Advertisement

So what can we do to combat the floating duck? Tackling the root cause is the way to go, the researchers conclude: we need to stop underreporting effort in social learning dynamics and foster a culture of openness when talking about our successes and failures. That way, we should become more aware of the work required of us and less likely to spread ourselves too thin chasing unrealistic perfection.

The study is published in the journal Evolutionary Human Sciences.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Bolivian president calls for global debt relief for poor countries
  2. Five Seasons Ventures pulls in €180M fund to tackle human health and climate via FoodTech
  3. Humanity’s Journey To A Metal-Rich Asteroid Launches Today. Here’s How To Watch
  4. Ancient DNA Reveals People Caught Leprosy From Adorable Woodland Critters In Medieval England

Source Link: What The Heck Is “Floating Duck Syndrome”? How Underestimating Effort Causes Harm

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • The World’s Longest Continuously Erupting Volcano Has Been Spewing Lava For At Least 2,000 Years
  • Rare Flat-Headed Cat Rediscovered In Thailand Following First Confirmed Sighting In Almost 30 Years
  • Don’t Pour Oil Down The Drain, There’s A Very Clever Way To Get Rid Of It
  • People Around The World Are Drinking Less Alcohol
  • Is It Better To Have One Long Walk Or Many Short Ones?
  • Where Is The World’s Largest Christmas Tree?
  • In A Monumental Scientific Effort, The Human Genome Has Been Mapped Across Time And Space In Four Dimensions
  • Can This Electronic Nose “Smell” Indoor Mould?
  • Why Does The Earth’s Closest Approach To The Sun Take Place During Winter?
  • 2025 Was The Year Humanity Got Closer Than Ever To Finding Alien Life
  • Kilauea Has Officially Been Erupting For A Year – You Can Watch Its Latest Spectacular Lava Fountains Live
  • Meet The Ladybird Spider, A “Red-Colored Oddball” With Features Never Seen Before
  • Breakthrough Listen Searched Interstellar Object 3I/ATLAS For Technosignatures During Its Closest Approach To Earth
  • “Miracle” Rhinoceros Calf’s Chonky Weight Gain Offers Hope For Species
  • Would You Swap Your Festive Feast For Something Plant-Based Or Lab-Grown?
  • Rodents In The US Are Rapidly Evolving Right “Under Your Nose”
  • 39-Year-Old Discovers Raisins Don’t Come From A Raisin Tree, Gets Mercilessly Roasted By Family And The Internet
  • Hundreds Of 19th-Century Black Leather Shoes Have Mysteriously Washed Up On A Beach
  • What’s Behind The “Florida Skunk Ape” Sightings? A Black Bear, Or Something Else?
  • Hubble Telescope’s Bite Of Dracula’s Chivito Reveals Chaos In The Largest Known Planet-Forming Disk
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version