"The urge to do everything faster and better is risky. Far wiser to do what’s good enough for the range of possible futures"
psyche.co/ideas/why-efficiency

#efficiency #Satisficing #BoundedRationality

Last updated 2 years ago

Florian Keusch · @floriankeusch
68 followers · 6 posts · Server mas.to

Interested in working with
@tobiasgummer, Christof Wolf, and me on a project about non-optimized response behavior in surveys () with data from twin studies at the Mannheim Centre for European Social Research (MZES) AND writing your dissertation
@unimannheim? Apply by Jan 15! mzes.uni-mannheim.de/d7/en/new

#Satisficing

Last updated 3 years ago

Doc Edward Morbius ⭕​ · @dredmorbius
2082 followers · 14677 posts · Server toot.cat

@jec Yes, this is very much what I'm getting at.

There are some Mastodon tools you can use, more on that in a follow-up.

On the concept itself, earlier writings:

Cheap Rejection as a Feature

Builds the idea that cheap and fast no-gregats information rejection is a feature in an information-rich world:

[M]ental models are not simply modeling devices, but information rejection tools. Borrowing from Clay Shirkey’s “It’s not information overload, it’s filter failure”, the world is a surprisingly information-rich space, and humans (or any other information-processing system, biological or otherwise) simply aren’t equipped to deal with more than a minuscule fraction of it. We aim for a useful fraction. It paints an incomplete, but useful picture.

Even a bad model has utility if it rejects information cheaply.

<diaspora.glasswings.com/posts/

Refutation of Metcalfe's Law revisited: network effects meet Sturgeon's Law
old.reddit.com/r/dredmorbius/c

On bullshit, S/N, craft, respect, and originality
old.reddit.com/r/dredmorbius/c

#SignalNoise #information #informationoverload #CheapRejection #models #Satisficing #informationtheory

Last updated 4 years ago