Resumo:
Heuristics are efficient cognitive processes that ignore information. In contrast to the widely held
view that less processing reduces accuracy, the study of heuristics shows that less information, computation,
and time can in fact improve accuracy. We review the major progress made so far: (a) the
discovery of less-is-more effects; (b) the study of the ecological rationality of heuristics, which
examines in which environments a given strategy succeeds or fails, and why; (c) an advancement
from vague labels to computational models of heuristics; (d) the development of a systematic theory
of heuristics that identifies their building blocks and the evolved capacities they exploit, and views
the cognitive system as relying on an ‘‘adaptive toolbox;’’ and (e) the development of an empirical
methodology that accounts for individual differences, conducts competitive tests, and has provided
evidence for people’s adaptive use of heuristics. Homo heuristicus has a biased mind and ignores part
of the available information, yet a biased mind can handle uncertainty more efficiently and robustly
than an unbiased mind relying on more resource-intensive and general-purpose processing strategies.
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