Good point. In hindsight, I somewhat wish I had described a more broad version of the hyper-attentive strategy (rather than saying what people do is directly try to model the minds of other people).
Now that you mention it, I think hyper-attentive people usually use the model-free reinforcement learning version of it. Or the model they use is some kind of ‘average person’ or ‘what the culture says the model should be’.
And if they did stop to model the real individual (rather than an average or cultural version of them), they’d deal much better. (I’ve noticed this in myself: I’ll be modelling the social version of a person, but if I stop to think what that individual is like, it’s much less scary and easier to think about.)
Good point. In hindsight, I somewhat wish I had described a more broad version of the hyper-attentive strategy (rather than saying what people do is directly try to model the minds of other people).
Now that you mention it, I think hyper-attentive people usually use the model-free reinforcement learning version of it. Or the model they use is some kind of ‘average person’ or ‘what the culture says the model should be’.
And if they did stop to model the real individual (rather than an average or cultural version of them), they’d deal much better. (I’ve noticed this in myself: I’ll be modelling the social version of a person, but if I stop to think what that individual is like, it’s much less scary and easier to think about.)