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Fishing for the right words: decision rules for human foraging behavior in internal search tasks
Authors:Wilke Andreas  Hutchinson John M C  Todd Peter M  Czienskowski Uwe
Institution:Center for Adaptive Behavior and Cognition, Max Planck Institute for Human Development;
Center for Behavior, Evolution and Culture, UCLA Department of Anthropology;
State Museum of Natural History Görlitz;
School of Informatics and Cognitive Science Program, Indiana University
Abstract:Animals depleting one patch of resources must decide when to leave and switch to a fresh patch. Foraging theory has predicted various decision mechanisms; which is best depends on environmental variation in patch quality. Previously we tested whether these mechanisms underlie human decision making when foraging for external resources; here we test whether humans behave similarly in a cognitive task seeking internally generated solutions. Subjects searched for meaningful words made from random letter sequences, and as their success rate declined, they could opt to switch to a fresh sequence. As in the external foraging context, time since the previous success and the interval preceding it had a major influence on when subjects switched. Subjects also used the commonness of sequence letters as a proximal cue to patch quality that influenced when to switch. Contrary to optimality predictions, switching decisions were independent of whether sequences differed little or widely in quality.
Keywords:Optimal foraging theory  Marginal Value Theorem  Patch leaving  Decision rule  Rule of thumb  Ecological rationality  Information foraging  Information scent  Patchy environment  Aggregation  Human bevioral ecology
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