@blazerboy30 I just started reading your "research paper" and it's beyond dumb... Comparing an action that someone has control over (Making a shot) compared to an action that someone has no control over (flipping heads or tails) is ridiculous. Also, making two shots can get a player in the zone mentally where he makes the following shot because of it, or it might not get him in the zone and he'll miss his next shot. Using the variation in these outcomes to try to disprove that players "get in the zone" and perform better because of it is very scientifically flawed.
Getting in the zone is rare. You can't
disprove it by using general stats based on a general timeline. There often is little to no correlation between amount of makes and "getting in the zone", yet the paper tries to establish correlation on a linear basic. They even admit this, but then they try to account for it by comparing the frequency of good "four shot sequences" with chance, with no stated adjustment for the fact that these hot stretches correlates with a rise in shooting percentage. Using a shooting percentage that rises with hot stretches to try to determine the expected frequency of these hot sequences is scientifically flawed.
This is a perfect example of people who haven't played basketball at a high enough level trying to use numbers to try to simplify something that they know
nothing about. There's so many variables that you cannot account for in a statistical analysis of "streak shooting". If someone hits 3 shots in a row, the other team is very likely to take away that players next shot or contest it much more heavily.
Basically, this research paper is absolute BS.