Gaze heuristic

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The gaze heuristic falls under the category of tracking heuristics, and it is used in directing correct motion to achieve a goal using one main variable.[1] McLeod & Dienes' (1996) example of the gaze heuristic is catching a ball.[2][3]

Gerd Gigerenzer categorizes the gaze heuristic under tracking heuristics,[4] where human animals and non-human animals are able to process large amounts of information quickly and react, regardless of whether the information is consciously processed.[5]

The gaze heuristic is a critical element in animal behavior, being used in predation heavily.[6] At the most basic level, the gaze heuristic ignores all casual relevant variables to make quick gut reactions.

See also

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI