Humans need to solve computationally intractable problems such as visual search, categorization, and simultaneous learning and acting, yet an increasing body of evidence suggests that their solutions to instantiations of these problems are near optimal. Computational complexity advances an explanation to this apparent paradox: (1) only a small portion of instances of such problems are actually hard, and (2) successful heuristics exploit structural properties of the typical instance to selectively improve parts that are likely to be sub-optimal. We hypothesize that these two ideas largely account for the good performance of humans on computationally hard problems. We tested part of this hypothesis by studying the solutions of 28 participants...
To explain human performance on the Traveling Salesperson problem (TSP), MacGregor, Ormerod, and Chr...
The Travelling Salesperson Problem (TSP) is a computationally difficult combinatorial optimization p...
We tested human performance on the Euclidean Traveling Salesman Problem using problems with 6–50 cit...
Humans need to solve computationally intractable problems such as visual search, categorization, and...
Two experiments on performance on the traveling salesman problem (TSP) are reported. The TSP consist...
Humans outperform, within limits, most algorithmic solutions in spatial optimization tasks, such as ...
Little research has been carried out on human performance in optimization problems, such as the Trav...
The Travelling Salesperson Problem (TSP) is a nondeterministic-polynomial hard (NP-hard) combinatori...
Untrained adults appear to have access to cognitive processes that allow them to perform well in the...
How effective do observers expect other problem solvers to be? What makes a decision seem "human"?" ...
Untrained adults appear to have access to cognitive processes that allow them to perform well in the...
Human performance on instances of computationally intractable optimization problems, such as the tra...
Is it possible for humans to navigate in the natural environment wherein the path taken between vari...
The Travelling Salesperson Problem (TSP) describes a situation where an imaginary individual wishes ...
We investigated human performance on the Euclidean Traveling Salesperson Problem (TSP) and Euclidean...
To explain human performance on the Traveling Salesperson problem (TSP), MacGregor, Ormerod, and Chr...
The Travelling Salesperson Problem (TSP) is a computationally difficult combinatorial optimization p...
We tested human performance on the Euclidean Traveling Salesman Problem using problems with 6–50 cit...
Humans need to solve computationally intractable problems such as visual search, categorization, and...
Two experiments on performance on the traveling salesman problem (TSP) are reported. The TSP consist...
Humans outperform, within limits, most algorithmic solutions in spatial optimization tasks, such as ...
Little research has been carried out on human performance in optimization problems, such as the Trav...
The Travelling Salesperson Problem (TSP) is a nondeterministic-polynomial hard (NP-hard) combinatori...
Untrained adults appear to have access to cognitive processes that allow them to perform well in the...
How effective do observers expect other problem solvers to be? What makes a decision seem "human"?" ...
Untrained adults appear to have access to cognitive processes that allow them to perform well in the...
Human performance on instances of computationally intractable optimization problems, such as the tra...
Is it possible for humans to navigate in the natural environment wherein the path taken between vari...
The Travelling Salesperson Problem (TSP) describes a situation where an imaginary individual wishes ...
We investigated human performance on the Euclidean Traveling Salesperson Problem (TSP) and Euclidean...
To explain human performance on the Traveling Salesperson problem (TSP), MacGregor, Ormerod, and Chr...
The Travelling Salesperson Problem (TSP) is a computationally difficult combinatorial optimization p...
We tested human performance on the Euclidean Traveling Salesman Problem using problems with 6–50 cit...