I’d agree with this. In which case, you calibrate against actual, real-world measurements of trust and value, and see if the heuristic outputs the same results as an uncached, laborous computation.
Sometimes it’s cheaper to fake status than to pay the costly signals of status like becoming a professional natural therapist instead of doing a medical degree to become a doctor.
Because of that the people trying to measure trust/value have to develop better ways at measuring the difference between true costly signals and fake signals.
Just answering this question. Need to read above but status is a heuristic for trust and value.
Doctors have high status because they should know more about health. Same applies to other professions.
I’d agree with this. In which case, you calibrate against actual, real-world measurements of trust and value, and see if the heuristic outputs the same results as an uncached, laborous computation.
Sometimes it’s cheaper to fake status than to pay the costly signals of status like becoming a professional natural therapist instead of doing a medical degree to become a doctor.
Because of that the people trying to measure trust/value have to develop better ways at measuring the difference between true costly signals and fake signals.