John M. C. Hutchinson (Max Planck
Institute for Human Development): Rules of thumb and optimality
We often invoke rules of thumb as a hand-waving explanation for why an
optimality model has failed to make accurate predictions. But I will
demonstrate that incorporating constraints into optimality models
provides useful suggestions about what sorts of rules of thumb we
expect to observe. As an example I consider patch-leaving rules for
foragers. I will give some other examples of rules of thumb that have
been derived empirically, many of them from social insects. In most
case empirical evidence is restricted to what cues are involved,
rather than very quantitative information on the form of the rules.
Finally I may introduce the research of Gigerenzer's ABC group
showing that simple heuristics can perform as well or better than much
more complex procedures.