Why the frontier of human decision making is more cognitive psychology than data analysis
occamsnudge.substack.com
For time immemorial, I have been fascinated by Sherlock Holmes and his keen power of inductive deduction - “ what likely would have happened “ looking at the trail of evidence. Over the last century, many realms have been written on his power of deduction and inductive logic but very few have been able to wring out the learnings from his powers of cognition, perception and distillation. As we get into a a “always white noise” on world where signals come towards us every single waking minute, a larger chunk of what consitutes noise and what constitutes signal is becoming more important than the distillation of the signal itself.
Why the frontier of human decision making is more cognitive psychology than data analysis
Why the frontier of human decision making is…
Why the frontier of human decision making is more cognitive psychology than data analysis
For time immemorial, I have been fascinated by Sherlock Holmes and his keen power of inductive deduction - “ what likely would have happened “ looking at the trail of evidence. Over the last century, many realms have been written on his power of deduction and inductive logic but very few have been able to wring out the learnings from his powers of cognition, perception and distillation. As we get into a a “always white noise” on world where signals come towards us every single waking minute, a larger chunk of what consitutes noise and what constitutes signal is becoming more important than the distillation of the signal itself.