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Suboptimal human inference can invert the bias-variance trade-off for decisions with asymmetric evidence
被引:0
|作者:
Eissa, Tahra L.
[1
]
Gold, Joshua I.
[2
]
Josic, Kresimir
[3
,4
]
Kilpatrick, Zachary P.
[1
,5
]
机构:
[1] Univ Colorado Boulder, Dept Appl Math, Boulder, CO 80309 USA
[2] Univ Penn, Dept Neurosci, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA
[3] Univ Houston, Dept Math, Houston, TX 77204 USA
[4] Univ Houston, Dept Biol & Biochem, Houston, TX USA
[5] Univ Colorado Boulder, Inst Cognit Sci, Boulder, CO USA
基金:
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词:
PRIOR PROBABILITY;
EXPERIENCE;
CHOICE;
INFORMATION;
FLUTTER;
EVENTS;
D O I:
10.1371/journal.pcbi.1010323
中图分类号:
Q5 [生物化学];
学科分类号:
071010 ;
081704 ;
摘要:
Solutions to challenging inference problems are often subject to a fundamental trade-off between: 1) bias (being systematically wrong) that is minimized with complex inference strategies, and 2) variance (being oversensitive to uncertain observations) that is minimized with simple inference strategies. However, this trade-off is based on the assumption that the strategies being considered are optimal for their given complexity and thus has unclear relevance to forms of inference based on suboptimal strategies. We examined inference problems applied to rare, asymmetrically available evidence, which a large population of human subjects solved using a diverse set of strategies that varied in form and complexity. In general, subjects using more complex strategies tended to have lower bias and variance, but with a dependence on the form of strategy that reflected an inversion of the classic bias-variance trade-off: subjects who used more complex, but imperfect, Bayesian-like strategies tended to have lower variance but higher bias because of incorrect tuning to latent task features, whereas subjects who used simpler heuristic strategies tended to have higher variance because they operated more directly on the observed samples but lower, nearnormative bias. Our results help define new principles that govern individual differences in behavior that depends on rare-event inference and, more generally, about the informationprocessing trade-offs that can be sensitive to not just the complexity, but also the optimality, of the inference process.
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