Books

Books : reviews

Gerd Gigerenzer, Peter M. Todd, ABC_Research_Group.
Simple Heuristics That Make Us Smart.
OUP. 1999

rating : 3.5 : worth reading
review : 29 August 2004

Simple Heuristics That Make Us Smart invites readers to embark on a new journey into a land of rationality that differs from the familiar territory of cognitive science and economics. Traditional views of rationality see decision makers as possessing superhuman powers of reason, limitless knowledge, and all of eternity in which to ponder choices. However, decisions in the real world require a different, more psychologically plausible notion of rationality, and this book provides it. It is about fast and frugal heuristics—simple rules for making decisions when time is pressing and deep thought an unaffordable luxury. These heuristics facilitate smart choices, classifications, and predictions through the use of bounded rationality.

I’m breaking one of my own rules, and reviewing a book I didn’t finish, yet not because it is "unfinishable". The reason is: I think it’s good, but after reading half of it, I feel I’ve got enough from it.

Economic models assume that agents are "rational", that they take the best choice of those available. More sophisticated models assume "bounded rationality" -- that the agents have only a fixed amount of computational power available. The authors point out that the usual definition of bounded rationality actually requires more computational power than full rationality, because the agent must also compute when to stop computing!

The thesis argued here is that agents do not use any of these forms of "rational" decision making: we humans instead make our decisions based on "fast and frugal heuristics", and moreover these heuristics are very effective indeed, even ignoring the benefits of them being so lightweight. The reason for the need for such heuristics is simple: we don’t have much time or brainpower to dedicate to careful consideration and weighing of all the alternatives; survival in the wild often requires snap decisions. The reason for their surprising effectiveness is more subtle:

p.vi. these heuristics are successful to the degree they are ecologically rational, that is, adapted to the structure of the information in the environment in which they are used to make decisions.

One example of the adaptation to the environment is the "larger town" test. Given the names of two towns in Germany (for an American test sample), say which is larger. Use the heuristic that, if you’ve heard of one town and not the other, answer the one you’ve heard of. It is quite likely to be the larger, simply because you are more likely to have heard of the larger -- and so the heuristic is adapted to the structure of the information in the relevant environment. And it is best not to know too much, because if you have heard of nearly all the towns, you can’t use the heuristic!

The authors don’t merely claim this to be the case: they have performed careful experiments to demonstrate that it works. Not only that: it, and other simple heuristics, can be more robust than "cleverer" choice methods, because they avoid over-fitting sparse data, avoid seeing patterns where none actually exist.

p94. Under situations of limited knowledge, simpler strategies may be more robust.

Various other heuristics are discussed, including techniques of satisficing:

p31. Satisficing is a method for making a choice from a set of alternatives encountered sequentially when one does not know much about the possibilities ahead of time. In such situations, there may be no optimal solution for when to stop searching for further alternatives .... Satisficing takes the shortcut of setting an adjustable aspiration level and ending the search for alternatives as soon as one is encountered that exceeds the aspiration level

All in all this is fascinating: careful experiments showing that amazingly simple heuristics work very well -- because they exploit structure in the information environment. So, this gives both a collection of heuristics to exploit, plus indications of where they will and will not be effective.

[22 September 2004: many thanks to John Beattie, who emailed me a useful reference for a view on when such simple heuristics are insufficient: Ian McCammon’s "Evidence of Heuristic Traps in Recreational Avalanche Accidents", as referenced in Risks 23.48.]