Empirical evidence for resource-rational anchoring and adjustment

被引:0
|
作者
Falk Lieder
Thomas L. Griffiths
Quentin J. M. Huys
Noah D. Goodman
机构
[1] University of California,Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute
[2] University of Zürich and Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) Zürich,Translational Neuromodeling Unit, Institute for Biomedical Engineering
[3] Stanford University,Department of Psychology
[4] University of Zürich,Department of Psychiatry, Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, Hospital of Psychiatry
[5] University of California,Department of Psychology
来源
关键词
Bounded rationality; Heuristics; Cognitive biases; Probabilistic reasoning; Anchoring-and-adjustment;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
People’s estimates of numerical quantities are systematically biased towards their initial guess. This anchoring bias is usually interpreted as sign of human irrationality, but it has recently been suggested that the anchoring bias instead results from people’s rational use of their finite time and limited cognitive resources. If this were true, then adjustment should decrease with the relative cost of time. To test this hypothesis, we designed a new numerical estimation paradigm that controls people’s knowledge and varies the cost of time and error independently while allowing people to invest as much or as little time and effort into refining their estimate as they wish. Two experiments confirmed the prediction that adjustment decreases with time cost but increases with error cost regardless of whether the anchor was self-generated or provided. These results support the hypothesis that people rationally adapt their number of adjustments to achieve a near-optimal speed-accuracy tradeoff. This suggests that the anchoring bias might be a signature of the rational use of finite time and limited cognitive resources rather than a sign of human irrationality.
引用
收藏
页码:775 / 784
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Empirical evidence for resource-rational anchoring and adjustment
    Lieder, Falk
    Griffiths, Thomas L.
    Huys, Quentin J. M.
    Goodman, Noah D.
    [J]. PSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN & REVIEW, 2018, 25 (02) : 775 - 784
  • [2] Resource-rational analysis versus resource-rational humans
    Rahnev, Dobromir
    [J]. BEHAVIORAL AND BRAIN SCIENCES, 2020, 43
  • [3] Resource-Rational Psychopathology
    Bari, Bilal A.
    Gershman, Samuel J.
    [J]. BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE, 2024,
  • [4] Resource-rational decision making
    Bhui, Rahul
    Lai, Lucy
    Gershman, Samuel J.
    [J]. CURRENT OPINION IN BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES, 2021, 41 : 15 - 21
  • [5] Holistic resource-rational analysis
    Haas, Julia
    Klein, Colin
    [J]. BEHAVIORAL AND BRAIN SCIENCES, 2020, 43
  • [6] Sampling as a resource-rational constraint
    Sanborn, Adam N.
    Zhu, Jianqiao
    Spicer, Jake
    Chater, Nick
    [J]. BEHAVIORAL AND BRAIN SCIENCES, 2020, 43
  • [7] Tight resource-rational analysis
    Dimov, Cvetomir M.
    Anderson, John R.
    Betts, Shawn A.
    [J]. COGNITIVE SYSTEMS RESEARCH, 2024, 86
  • [8] The evolutionary foundations of resource-rational analysis
    Schulz, Armin W.
    [J]. BEHAVIORAL AND BRAIN SCIENCES, 2020, 43
  • [9] Resource-rational Models of Human Goal Pursuit
    Prystawski, Ben
    Mohnert, Florian
    Tosic, Mateo
    Lieder, Falk
    [J]. TOPICS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCE, 2022, 14 (03) : 528 - 549
  • [10] Resource-rational account of sequential effects in human prediction
    Prat-Carrabin, Arthur
    Meyniel, Florent
    da Silveira, Rava Azeredo
    [J]. ELIFE, 2024, 13