Routledge Handbook of Bounded Rationality
Type de matériel :
TexteLangue : Anglais Détails de publication : Taylor & Francis Routledge [Imprint] 2021Description : 1 online resourceType de contenu : - text
- computer
- online resource
- 9780367563943
- 9781138999381
- 9781315658353
- Decision making
- Rationalization (Psychology)
- Reasoning
- Decision Making
- Rationalization
- Prise de décision
- Rationalisation (Psychologie)
- BUSINESS & ECONOMICS -- Economic History
- BUSINESS & ECONOMICS -- Economics -- General
- BUSINESS & ECONOMICS -- Economics -- Theory
- Business and Management
- decision making
- Decision making
- Economic history
- Economic theory and philosophy
- Economics, Finance, Business and Management
- Economics
- Finance and accounting
- Finance and the finance industry
- Rationalization (Psychology)
- Reasoning
- digital environments
- digitalization
- ecological perspectives on human behaviour
- economic uncertainty
- environmental change
- heterodox economics
- heuristics
- heuristics framework
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The ongoing process of digitalization seems to be changing our world dramatically. While many of these changes might lead to improvements for human well-being, others might entail profoundly disastrous consequences both for individuals and for societies as a whole. One research program that might be particularly suitable for studying environmental changes is the fast-and-frugal heuristics framework. This theoretical framework adopts an ecological perspective on human behavior, cognition, and performance. In an uncertain world, humans, so the argument goes, can adaptively respond to environmental demands by relying on a repertoire of simple decision strategies, called heuristics. Selecting heuristics that fit the environment results in adaptive behavior. This chapter focuses on the possible negative aspects of digitalization to discuss how the science of heuristic decision making under uncertainty might aid reflection on how individuals navigate their way through sudden, disruptive, and thorough environmental changes. Specifically, it sketches out what aversive future digital environments might look like, and which heuristics individuals and societies might rely upon in order to manage those aversive environments. The chapter concludes by (1) pointing to a series of research questions about how digital environments might differ from other environments that we humans have encountered both in our more recent history and over the course of our evolution, as well as (2) turning to questions about children and education.
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