AbstractHumans engage in many tasks that involve gathering multiple targets from their environment (e.g., picking berries from a patch). Such foraging tasks raise questions about how observers maximize target collection – e.g., how long should one spend at one berry patch before moving to the next patch. Classic optimal foraging theories propose a simple decision rule: People move on when current intake drops below the average rate. Previous studies of foraging often assume this average is fixed and predict no strong relationship between the contents of the immediately preceding patch or patches and the current patch. In contrast to this prediction, we found evidence of temporal effects in a laboratory analog of a berry-picking task. Observ...
International audienceCognitive abilities enabling animals that feed on ephemeral but yearly renewab...
Foraging has been suggested to provide a more ecologically-valid context for studying decision-makin...
Little is known about how animals acquire and use prior information, particularly for Bayesian patch...
AbstractHumans engage in many tasks that involve gathering multiple targets from their environment (...
The patch-leaving problem is a canonical foraging task, in which a forager must decide to leave a cu...
The patch-leaving problem is a canonical foraging task, in which a forager must decide to leave a cu...
We present a study that links optimal foraging theory (OFT) to behavioral timing. OFT's distinguishi...
Patch foraging presents a sequential decision-making problem widely studied across organisms-stay wi...
Patch use theory and the marginal value theorem predict that a foraging patch should be abandoned wh...
Nearly all animals forage to acquire energy for survival through efficient search and resource harve...
1. A forager’s optimal patch-departure time can be predicted by the prescient marginal value theorem...
Foraging is a common decision problem in natural environments. When new exploitable sites are always...
Patch use theory and the marginal value theorem predict that a foraging patch should be abandoned wh...
Foraging is a common decision problem in natural environments. When new exploitable sites are always...
Many foraging animals return to feeding sites to harvest replenishing resources, but little is known...
International audienceCognitive abilities enabling animals that feed on ephemeral but yearly renewab...
Foraging has been suggested to provide a more ecologically-valid context for studying decision-makin...
Little is known about how animals acquire and use prior information, particularly for Bayesian patch...
AbstractHumans engage in many tasks that involve gathering multiple targets from their environment (...
The patch-leaving problem is a canonical foraging task, in which a forager must decide to leave a cu...
The patch-leaving problem is a canonical foraging task, in which a forager must decide to leave a cu...
We present a study that links optimal foraging theory (OFT) to behavioral timing. OFT's distinguishi...
Patch foraging presents a sequential decision-making problem widely studied across organisms-stay wi...
Patch use theory and the marginal value theorem predict that a foraging patch should be abandoned wh...
Nearly all animals forage to acquire energy for survival through efficient search and resource harve...
1. A forager’s optimal patch-departure time can be predicted by the prescient marginal value theorem...
Foraging is a common decision problem in natural environments. When new exploitable sites are always...
Patch use theory and the marginal value theorem predict that a foraging patch should be abandoned wh...
Foraging is a common decision problem in natural environments. When new exploitable sites are always...
Many foraging animals return to feeding sites to harvest replenishing resources, but little is known...
International audienceCognitive abilities enabling animals that feed on ephemeral but yearly renewab...
Foraging has been suggested to provide a more ecologically-valid context for studying decision-makin...
Little is known about how animals acquire and use prior information, particularly for Bayesian patch...