TY - JOUR
T1 - People's study time allocation and its relation to animal foraging
AU - Metcalfe, Janet
AU - Jacobs, W. Jake
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was supported by National Institute of Mental Health grant RO1-MH60637 . The authors are solely responsible for the views expressed herein. We thank Lisa K. Son for her help and comments.
PY - 2010/2
Y1 - 2010/2
N2 - In this article we suggest a relation between people's metacognitively guided study time allocation strategies and animal foraging. These two domains are similar insofar as people use specific metacognitive cues to assist their study time allocation just as other species use cues, such as scent marking. People decline to study items that they know they already know, just as other species use a win-shift strategy - avoiding already visited and depleted patches - in foraging. People selectively study the easiest as-yet-unlearned items first, before turning to more difficult items just as other species take the 'just right' size and challenge of prey-the so-called Goldilocks principle. People use a stop rule by which they give up on one item and turn to another when the returns diminish just as others species use a stop rule that guides shifting from one patch to another. The value that each item is assigned on the criterion test, if known during study, influences which items people choose to study and how long they study them just as knowledge of the nutritional or energy value of the food influences choices and perseverance in foraging. Finally, study time allocation strategies can differ in their effectiveness depending upon the expertise of the student just as some species forage close to optimally while others do not.
AB - In this article we suggest a relation between people's metacognitively guided study time allocation strategies and animal foraging. These two domains are similar insofar as people use specific metacognitive cues to assist their study time allocation just as other species use cues, such as scent marking. People decline to study items that they know they already know, just as other species use a win-shift strategy - avoiding already visited and depleted patches - in foraging. People selectively study the easiest as-yet-unlearned items first, before turning to more difficult items just as other species take the 'just right' size and challenge of prey-the so-called Goldilocks principle. People use a stop rule by which they give up on one item and turn to another when the returns diminish just as others species use a stop rule that guides shifting from one patch to another. The value that each item is assigned on the criterion test, if known during study, influences which items people choose to study and how long they study them just as knowledge of the nutritional or energy value of the food influences choices and perseverance in foraging. Finally, study time allocation strategies can differ in their effectiveness depending upon the expertise of the student just as some species forage close to optimally while others do not.
KW - Foraging
KW - Metacognition
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U2 - 10.1016/j.beproc.2009.12.011
DO - 10.1016/j.beproc.2009.12.011
M3 - Article
C2 - 20026197
AN - SCOPUS:77349105505
VL - 83
SP - 213
EP - 221
JO - Behavioural Processes
JF - Behavioural Processes
SN - 0376-6357
IS - 2
ER -