Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q15637701> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 26 of
26
with 100 triples per page.
- Q15637701 subject Q7153044.
- Q15637701 abstract "The adaptive toolbox is the ability of an institution or individual to make expedient decisions. The concept was originated by Gerd Gigerenzer. The adaptive toolbox employs the theory of ecological rationality. Businesses or individuals employ the adaptive toolbox in order to handle situations of uncertainty involving limited time, computational resources and information. The content of the adaptive toolbox is shaped by evolution, learning, and culture for specific domains of inference and reasoning, as well as changes across the life stages. In short, it is a decision-making method that uses an individual's past experiences and problem solving skills to make decisions in an unfamiliar or high-stress environment. Heuristics is another term for these decision-making models.The adaptive toolbox consists of: The collection of elements – such as search rules, stopping rules, and decision rules for constructing heuristics. Core mental capacities that building blocks exploit – such as recognition memory, depth perception, frequency monitoring, object tracking, and the ability to imitate. A specific group of rules or heuristics rather than a general-purpose decision-making algorithm. These heuristics are fast, frugal, and computationally cheap, but are less consistent, coherent, and general.Common examples include: a) Recognition-based heuristics (e.g. recognition heuristic, fluency heuristic) b) One-reason decision-making (e.g. Take-the-best, Fast and Frugal Trees) c) Trade-off heuristics (e.g. 1/N, Tallying) d) Satisficing heuristics e) Social heuristics (e.g. tit for tat, imitate-the-majority, imitate-the-successful, default heuristic, social circle heuristic, averaging, choosing).The extent to which humans, and other species, share heuristics depends on the extent to which those humans experience the same adaptive problems, environmental structures, and core capacities. For example, "while the absence of language production from the adaptive toolbox of other animals means they cannot use name recognition to make inferences about their world, some animal species can use other capacities such as taste and smell recognition as input for the recognition heuristic."".
- Q15637701 wikiPageWikiLink Q108184.
- Q15637701 wikiPageWikiLink Q1139524.
- Q15637701 wikiPageWikiLink Q1331926.
- Q15637701 wikiPageWikiLink Q13649246.
- Q15637701 wikiPageWikiLink Q1367487.
- Q15637701 wikiPageWikiLink Q1547430.
- Q15637701 wikiPageWikiLink Q17009844.
- Q15637701 wikiPageWikiLink Q17081866.
- Q15637701 wikiPageWikiLink Q175002.
- Q15637701 wikiPageWikiLink Q1752525.
- Q15637701 wikiPageWikiLink Q1777902.
- Q15637701 wikiPageWikiLink Q201413.
- Q15637701 wikiPageWikiLink Q27636.
- Q15637701 wikiPageWikiLink Q4874465.
- Q15637701 wikiPageWikiLink Q5249235.
- Q15637701 wikiPageWikiLink Q5462648.
- Q15637701 wikiPageWikiLink Q5748260.
- Q15637701 wikiPageWikiLink Q7134996.
- Q15637701 wikiPageWikiLink Q7153044.
- Q15637701 wikiPageWikiLink Q730920.
- Q15637701 wikiPageWikiLink Q7677543.
- Q15637701 wikiPageWikiLink Q9047.
- Q15637701 comment "The adaptive toolbox is the ability of an institution or individual to make expedient decisions. The concept was originated by Gerd Gigerenzer. The adaptive toolbox employs the theory of ecological rationality. Businesses or individuals employ the adaptive toolbox in order to handle situations of uncertainty involving limited time, computational resources and information.".
- Q15637701 label "Adaptive Toolbox".