Untrained adults appear to have access to cognitive processes that allow them to perform well in the Euclidean version of the traveling salesperson problem (E-TSP). They do so despite the famous computational intractability of the problem, which stems from its combinatorial complexity. A current hypothesis is the humans' good performance is based on following a strategy of connecting boundary points in order (the convex hull hypothesis). Recently, an alternative has been proposed, that performance is governed by a strategy of avoiding crossings. We examined the crossing avoidance hypothesis from the perspectives of its capacity to explain existing data, its theoretical adequacy, and its ability to explain the results of three new experiment...
To explain human performance on the Traveling Salesperson problem (TSP), MacGregor, Ormerod, and Chr...
Little research has been carried out on human performance in optimization problems, such as the Trav...
Lee and Vickers (2000) suggest that the results of MacGregor and Ormerod (1996), showing that the re...
Untrained adults appear to have access to cognitive processes that allow them to perform well in the...
Recently there has been growing interest among psychologists in human performance on the Euclidean t...
We compared the performance of three heuristics with that of subjects on variants of a well-known co...
We compared the performance of three heuristics with that of subjects on variants of a well-known co...
If a salesperson aims to visit a number of cities only once before returning home, which route shoul...
We compared the performance of three heuristics with that of subjects on variants of a well-known co...
The planar Euclidean version of the traveling salesperson problem requires finding the shortest tour...
Contains fulltext : 73355.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)To explain human...
The Travelling Salesperson Problem (TSP) describes a situation where an imaginary individual wishes ...
Human performance on instances of computationally intractable optimization problems, such as the tra...
To explain human performance on the Traveling Salesperson problem (TSP), MacGregor, Ormerod, and Chr...
The Travelling Salesperson Problem (TSP) is a nondeterministic-polynomial hard (NP-hard) combinatori...
To explain human performance on the Traveling Salesperson problem (TSP), MacGregor, Ormerod, and Chr...
Little research has been carried out on human performance in optimization problems, such as the Trav...
Lee and Vickers (2000) suggest that the results of MacGregor and Ormerod (1996), showing that the re...
Untrained adults appear to have access to cognitive processes that allow them to perform well in the...
Recently there has been growing interest among psychologists in human performance on the Euclidean t...
We compared the performance of three heuristics with that of subjects on variants of a well-known co...
We compared the performance of three heuristics with that of subjects on variants of a well-known co...
If a salesperson aims to visit a number of cities only once before returning home, which route shoul...
We compared the performance of three heuristics with that of subjects on variants of a well-known co...
The planar Euclidean version of the traveling salesperson problem requires finding the shortest tour...
Contains fulltext : 73355.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)To explain human...
The Travelling Salesperson Problem (TSP) describes a situation where an imaginary individual wishes ...
Human performance on instances of computationally intractable optimization problems, such as the tra...
To explain human performance on the Traveling Salesperson problem (TSP), MacGregor, Ormerod, and Chr...
The Travelling Salesperson Problem (TSP) is a nondeterministic-polynomial hard (NP-hard) combinatori...
To explain human performance on the Traveling Salesperson problem (TSP), MacGregor, Ormerod, and Chr...
Little research has been carried out on human performance in optimization problems, such as the Trav...
Lee and Vickers (2000) suggest that the results of MacGregor and Ormerod (1996), showing that the re...