Later work seems to support the notion of fast and frugal algorithms performing evenly with more complicated ones. See e.g. Fast and Frugal Heuristics: The Tools of Bounded Rationality for references to later experiments. (It’s unfortunately too late here for me to write a proper summary of it, especially since I haven’t read the referenced later studies.)
Later work seems to support the notion of fast and frugal algorithms performing evenly with more complicated ones. See e.g. Fast and Frugal Heuristics: The Tools of Bounded Rationality for references to later experiments. (It’s unfortunately too late here for me to write a proper summary of it, especially since I haven’t read the referenced later studies.)
ok, sure. So there has been some thought put in beyond “here’s this one challenge that we rigged to make the fast and frugal algorithm look good!”