Evolution and the Mechanisms of Decision Making
Hammerstein, Peter, Stevens, Jeffrey R.
- 出版商: MIT
- 出版日期: 2024-03-19
- 售價: $2,690
- 貴賓價: 9.5 折 $2,556
- 語言: 英文
- 頁數: 448
- 裝訂: Quality Paper - also called trade paper
- ISBN: 0262551500
- ISBN-13: 9780262551502
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商品描述
A multidisciplinary examination of cognitive mechanisms, shaped over evolutionary time through natural selection, that govern decision making. How do we make decisions? Conventional decision theory tells us only which behavioral choices we ought to make if we follow certain axioms. In real life, however, our choices are governed by cognitive mechanisms shaped over evolutionary time through the process of natural selection. Evolution has created strong biases in how and when we process information, and it is these evolved cognitive building blocks--from signal detection and memory to individual and social learning--that provide the foundation for our choices. An evolutionary perspective thus sheds necessary light on the nature of how we and other animals make decisions. This volume--with contributors from a broad range of disciplines, including evolutionary biology, psychology, economics, anthropology, neuroscience, and computer science--offers a multidisciplinary examination of what evolution can tell us about our and other animals' mechanisms of decision making. Human children, for example, differ from chimpanzees in their tendency to over-imitate others and copy obviously useless actions; this divergence from our primate relatives sets up imitation as one of the important mechanisms underlying human decision making. The volume also considers why and when decision mechanisms are robust, why they vary across individuals and situations, and how social life affects our decisions.
商品描述(中文翻譯)
一本多學科的研究,探討經由自然選擇在演化時間中形成的認知機制,這些機制主導著決策過程。
我們如何做出決策?傳統的決策理論只告訴我們,如果我們遵循某些公理,我們應該做出哪些行為選擇。然而,在現實生活中,我們的選擇受到經由自然選擇在演化時間中形成的認知機制的支配。演化創造了我們在處理資訊時的強烈偏見,以及我們何時處理資訊,而這些演化形成的認知基礎,從信號檢測和記憶到個體和社會學習,為我們的選擇提供了基礎。因此,演化的觀點對於我們和其他動物如何做出決策的本質提供了必要的光線。
這本書由來自多個學科的貢獻者撰寫,包括演化生物學、心理學、經濟學、人類學、神經科學和計算機科學等,提供了一個多學科的研究,關於演化如何告訴我們關於我們和其他動物的決策機制。例如,人類兒童在模仿他人和複製明顯無用的行為方面與黑猩猩不同;這種與我們靈長類親戚的差異使模仿成為人類決策的重要機制之一。本書還考慮了決策機制為何時強大,為何在個體和情境之間變化,以及社會生活如何影響我們的決策。
作者簡介
Peter Hammerstein is Professor in Organismic Evolution at the Institute for Theoretical Biology at Humboldt University, Berlin and an external member of the interdisciplinary Santa Fe Institute. Jeffrey R. Stevens is Assistant Professor of Psychology and a faculty member of the Center for Brain, Biology, and Behavior at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.
作者簡介(中文翻譯)
Peter Hammerstein是柏林洪堡大學理論生物學研究所的有機進化教授,也是跨學科的聖塔菲研究所的外部成員。
Jeffrey R. Stevens是心理學助理教授,並且是內布拉斯加大學林肯分校大腦、生物和行為中心的教職成員。