Rationality Enhancement Article 2017

Strategy selection as rational metareasoning

Many contemporary accounts of human reasoning assume that the mind is equipped with multiple heuristics that could be deployed to perform a given task. This raises the question of how the mind determines when to use which heuristic. To answer this question, we developed a rational model of strategy selection, based on the theory of rational metareasoning developed in the artificial intelligence literature. According to our model people learn to efficiently choose the strategy with the best cost–benefit tradeoff by learning a predictive model of each strategy’s performance. We found that our model can provide a unifying explanation for classic findings from domains ranging from decision-making to arithmetic by capturing the variability of people’s strategy choices, their dependence on task and context, and their development over time. Systematic model comparisons supported our theory, and 4 new experiments confirmed its distinctive predictions. Our findings suggest that people gradually learn to make increasingly more rational use of fallible heuristics. This perspective reconciles the 2 poles of the debate about human rationality by integrating heuristics and biases with learning and rationality. (APA PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2017 APA, all rights reserved)

Author(s): Falk Lieder and Thomas L. Griffiths
Journal: Psychological Review
Volume: 124
Pages: 762--794
Year: 2017
Month: November
Publisher: American Psychological Association
Project(s):
Bibtex Type: Article (article)
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1037/rev0000075
State: Published
Electronic Archiving: grant_archive
Language: English

BibTex

@article{lieder2017strategy,
  title = {Strategy selection as rational metareasoning},
  journal = {Psychological Review},
  abstract = {Many contemporary accounts of human reasoning assume that the mind is equipped with multiple heuristics that could be deployed to perform a given task. This raises the question of how the mind determines when to use which heuristic. To answer this question, we developed a rational model of strategy selection, based on the theory of rational metareasoning developed in the artificial intelligence literature. According to our model people learn to efficiently choose the strategy with the best cost–benefit tradeoff by learning a predictive model of each strategy’s performance. We found that our model can provide a unifying explanation for classic findings from domains ranging from decision-making to arithmetic by capturing the variability of people’s strategy choices, their dependence on task and context, and their development over time. Systematic model comparisons supported our theory, and 4 new experiments confirmed its distinctive predictions. Our findings suggest that people gradually learn to make increasingly more rational use of fallible heuristics. This perspective reconciles the 2 poles of the debate about human rationality by integrating heuristics and biases with learning and rationality. (APA PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2017 APA, all rights reserved)},
  volume = {124},
  pages = {762--794},
  publisher = {American Psychological Association},
  month = nov,
  year = {2017},
  slug = {lieder2017strategy},
  author = {Lieder, Falk and Griffiths, Thomas L.},
  month_numeric = {11}
}