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Simple Heuristics that Make Us Smart

Gerd Gigerenzer, Peter M. Todd, and ABC Research Group

Price: £17.99 (paper)
ISBN-13: 978-0-19-514381-2
Publication date: 26 October 2000
432 pages, 62 line illus, 6-1/8 x 9-1/4 mm
Series: Evolution and Cognition Series
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Reviews
  • '"How do people cope in the real, complex world of confusing and overwhelming information and rapidly approaching deadlines? This important book starts a new quest for answers. Here, Gigerenzer, Todd, and their lively research group show that simple heuristics are powerful tools that do surprisingly well. The field of decision making will never be the same again."--Donald A. Norman, author of Things That Make Us Smart and The Invisible Computer' -
  • '"Gigerenzer & Todd's volume represents a major advance in our understanding of human reasoning, with many genuinely new ideas on how people think and an impressive body of data to back them up. Simple Heuristics is indispensable for cognitive psychologists, economists, and anyone else interested in reason and rationality."--Steven Pinker, author of How the Mind Works and Words and Rules' -
  • '"In the past few years, the theory of rational (sensible) human behavior has broken loose from the illusory and empirically unsupported notion that deciding rationally means maximizing expected utility. Research has learned to take seriously and study empirically how real human beings ... actually address the vast complexities of the world they inhabit. Simple Heuristics ... offers a fascinating introduction to this revolution in cognitive science, striking a great blow for sanity in the approach to human rationality."--Herbert A. Simon, Carnegie Mellon University, and Nobel Laureate in Economics' -
  • '"This book is a major contribution to the theory of bounded rationality. It illustrates that the surprising efficiency of fast and simple procedures is due to their fit with the structure of the environment in which they are used. The emphasis on this ecological rationality is an advance in a promising and already fruitful new direction of research."--Reinhard Selten, Professor of Economics at the University of Bonn, and Nobel Laureate in Economics' -
  • '"In recent years, and particularly in the culture wars, many people have written about rationality. These authors now provide a summary of this recent history, organized on the basis of different types of decision making. In each case, the authors summarize the literature so as to provide an implicit history. But the book is more fundamentally aimed at making rationality workable by showing 'the way that real people make the majority of their inferences and decisions.'"--Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences' -

Description
  • A fascinating account of how people really make decisions under real-world conditions.
Simple Heuristics That Make Us Smart invites readers to embark on a new journey into a land of rationality that differs from the familiar territory of cognitive science and economics. Traditional views of rationality tend to see decision makers as possessing superhuman powers of reason, limitless knowledge, and all of eternity in which to ponder choices. To understand decisions in the real world, we need a different, more psychologically plausible notion of rationality, and this book provides it. It is about fast and frugal heuristics--simple rules for making decisions when time is pressing and deep thought an unaffordable luxury. These heuristics can enable both living organisms and artificial systems to make smart choices, classifications, and predictions by employing bounded rationality.
But when and how can such fast and frugal heuristics work? Can judgments based simply on one good reason be as accurate as those based on many reasons? Could less knowledge even lead to systematically better predictions than more knowledge? Simple Heuristics explores these questions, developing computational models of heuristics and testing them through experiments and analyses. It shows how fast and frugal heuristics can produce adaptive decisions in situations as varied as choosing a mate, dividing resources among offspring, predicting high school drop out rates, and playing the stock market.
As an interdisciplinary work that is both useful and engaging, this book will appeal to a wide audience. It is ideal for researchers in cognitive psychology, evolutionary psychology, and cognitive science, as well as in economics and artificial intelligence. It will also inspire anyone interested in simply making good decisions.

Readership: Researchers in cognitive psychology, evolutionary psychology, and cognitive science, as well as economics and artificial intelligence.

Contents
The ABC Research Group
I. The Research Agenda
1. Fast and Frugal Heuristics: The Adaptive Toolbox , Gerd Gigerenzer and Peter M. Todd
II. Ignorance-Based Decision Making
2. The Recognition Heuristic: How Ignorance Makes Us Smart , Daniel G. Goldstein and Gerd Gigerenzer
3. Can Ignorance Beat the Stock Market? , Bernhard Borges et al.
III. One-Reason Decision Making
4. Betting on One Good Reason: The Take The Best Heuristic , Gerd Gigerenzer and Daniel G. Goldstein
5. How Good Are Simple Heuristics? , Jean Czerlinski, Gerd Gigerenzer, and Daniel G. Goldstein
6. Why Does One-Reason Decision Making Work? A Case Study in Ecological Rationality , Laura Martignon and Ulrich Hoffrage
7. When Do People Use Simple Heuristics, and How Can We Tell? , Jörg Rieskamp and Ulrich Hoffrage
8. Bayesian Benchmarks for Fast and Frugal Heuristics , Laura Martignon and Kathryn Blackmond Laskey
IV. Beyond Choice: Memory, Estimation, and Categorization
9. Hindsight Bias: A Price Worth Paying for Fast and Frugal Memory , Ulrich Hoffrage and Ralph Hertwig
10. Quick Estimation: Letting the Environment Do the Work , Ralph Hertwig, Ulrich Hoffrage, and Laura Martignon
11. Categorization by Elimination: Using Few Cues to Choose , Patricia M. Berretty, Peter M. Todd, and Laura Martignon
V. Social Intelligence
12. How Motion Reveals Intention: Categorizing Social Interactions , Philip W. Blythe, Peter M. Todd, and Geoffrey F. Miller
13. From Pride and Prejudice to Persuasion: Satisficing in Mate Search , Peter M. Todd and Geoffrey F. Miller
14. Parental Investment by Simple Decision Rules , Jennifer Nerissa Davis and Peter M. Todd
VI. A Look Around, A Look Back, A Look Ahead
15. Demons versus Heuristics in Artificial Intelligence, Behavioral Ecology, and Economis , Adam S. Goodie et al.
16. What We Have Learned (So Far) , Peter M. Todd and Gerd Gigerenzer
References
Name Index
Subject Index

Authors, editors, and contributors


Gerd Gigerenzer, Director, Center for Adaptive Behavior and Cognition,
Peter M. Todd, Research Scientist, both at the Max Planck Institute for Psychological Research, and
ABC Research Group, Max Planck Institute for Human Development


Links to web resources and related information
More in the same subject area:
Cognitive theory
Cognition & cognitive psychology
Artificial intelligence
Economics

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