Beginner's luck
Beginner's luck refers to the supposed phenomenon of novices experiencing disproportionate frequency of success or succeeding against an expert in a given activity.[1] One would expect experts to outperform novices - when the opposite happens it is counter-intuitive, hence the need for a term to describe this phenomenon.[2] The term is most often used in reference to a first attempt in sport or gambling, but is also used in many other diverse contexts. The term is also used when no skill whatsoever is involved, such as a first-time slot machine player winning the jackpot.
See also
- Amateur
- Jinx
- Luck
- Mojo
- Odds
- Psychology
- Regression toward the mean
- Rookie
- U-shaped development
References
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Superstition
- Amulet
- Evil eye
- Luck
- Omen
- Talismans
- Myth and ritual
- Superstition in Ethiopia
- Buda
- Gris-gris
- Sampy
- Sleeping child
- Superstition in India
- Superstition in Pakistan
- Superstition in the Philippines
- Japanese superstitions
- Superstition in Korea
- Bhoot (ghost)
- Chhaupadi
- Churel
- Ghosts in Bengali culture
- Jackal's horn
- Kuai Kuai culture
- Muhurta
- Navaratna
- Nazar
- Nazar battu
- Pichal Peri
- Puppy pregnancy syndrome
- Akabeko
- Kanai Anzen
- Maneki-neko
- Okiagari-koboshi
- Ofuda
- Omamori
- Fan death
- Feng shui
- Hindu astrology
- Agimat
- Albularyo
- Barang
- Kulam
- Lihi
- Pagtatawas
- Pasma
- Usog
- Kuman Thong
- Palad khik
- Takrut
- Nang Kwak
- Vastu shastra
- White elephant
- Jin Chan
- Numbers in Chinese culture
- Yantra cloth
- August curse
- Barbary macaques in Gibraltar
- Bayern-luck
- Blarney Stone
- Cimaruta
- Cornicello
- The Goodman's Croft
- Himmelsbrief
- Icelandic magical staves
- In bocca al lupo
- Kitchen witch
- Klabautermann
- Mooncalf
- Need-fire
- Painted pebbles
- Powder of sympathy
- Rabbit rabbit rabbit
- Ravens of the Tower of London
- Russian traditions and superstitions
- Superstition in Britain
- Superstition in Serbia
- Spilling water for luck
- The Scottish Play
- Troll cross
- Tycho Brahe days
- Witch post
- Wolfssegen
- 1 (Ace of spades)
- 3 (Three on a match)
- 4 (Four-leaf clover, tetraphobia)
- 7 (Seventh son of a seventh son)
- 11:11
- 13 (Friday the 13th, The Thirteen Club, thirteenth floor, triskaidekaphobia)
- 17 (Heptadecaphobia)
- 27 (27 Club)
- 39 (Curse of 39)
- 666 (Number of the Beast)
- Auspicious wedding dates
- Baseball superstition
- Beginner's luck
- Black cat
- Bread and butter
- Break a leg
- Bullroarer
- Chain letter
- Cramp-ring
- Curse
- Davy Jones' Locker
- Dead man's hand
- End-of-the-day betting effect
- Fear of frogs
- Fear of ghosts
- Fertility rite
- First-foot
- Flying Dutchman
- Four eleven forty-four
- Gambler's conceit
- Good luck charm
- Human sacrifice
- Jinx
- Hex
- Knocking on wood
- Law of contagion
- Literomancy
- Lock of hair
- Maternal impression
- Miasma theory
- Nelson
- Numerophobia
- Numismatic charm
- Penny
- Rabbit's foot
- Rainmaking
- Ship sponsor
- Shoes on a table
- Sign of the horns
- Something old
- Spilling salt
- Statue rubbing
- Threshold
- Toi toi toi
- Wishing well
- Witch ball
- Witching hour
- Apophenia
- Apotropaic magic
- Astrology and science
- Coincidence
- Debunker
- Divination
- Folk religion
- Fortune-telling
- Magic and religion
- Magical thinking
- Numerology
- Perceptions of religious imagery in natural phenomena
- Post hoc ergo propter hoc
- Traditional medicine
- Urban legend
- Superstition in Judaism
- Superstitions in Muslim societies