Bad at estimating? Blame evolution

original link

February 2011

The next time you are in the kitchen, try this experiment: pick up a box of butter (four sticks) in one hand and a box of saltines (four packets) in the other. Which is heavier? If you said the butter, you are not alone. Most people would identify the box of butter as the heavier object — even though, if you look at the labels, you'll see that they both weigh exactly one pound! This is an example of the size-weight illusion, and it is incredibly common. Most people — very young children, people from different cultures, and even people who know ahead of time that the two object weigh the same — report that the smaller of two objects of equal mass just "feels" heavier. Why is this? Recent research suggests that the roots of this modern party trick (as well as our penchant for sports like baseball and football) can be traced back to the evolutionary origins of Homo sapiens and to the opportunities provided by a well thrown rock or spear.

Where's the evolution?

When we humans make judgments, we often feel that we are 100% in charge of our thinking — that we simply observe the world as it is and make a conscious decision about it — but in fact, our brains and sensory systems have built-in biases that may subtly (or not so subtly!) influence both our perceptions and decision-making. Psychologists have demonstrated lots of them: We pay more attention to observations that support our current ideas than to observations that contradict what we already think. If an object is moving to the right, we perceive it as being further to the right than it actually is. We think that sounds that get louder are changing more than sounds that get softer. We view travel routes with more turns as longer than straight routes, even when they are the same distance. And those are just a few of the biases that shape how we view the world.

Biases that are hard-wired — those that are not learned through experience with the world — have evolutionary explanations. Some are simply by-products of the evolution of another feature. For example, the bias in our perception of travel distance may be a side effect of how our brains have evolved to efficiently estimate the passage of time. Other biases are adaptations themselves. For example, as the source of a sound gets closer to us, the sound becomes louder. Perhaps our bias for overestimating the change in an intensifying sound is something of an early-alert warning system, sensitizing us to potential danger approaching, and was favored by natural selection. Those with this perceptual bias may have been more likely to escape attacks and survive to reproduce than those without the bias (though further studies would be necessary to determine if this bias is actually an adaptation).

...

How might the size-weight illusion aid throwing skill? When selecting an object to throw a long distance, size and weight are key. It is harder to throw a large, light object a long distance than it is to throw a smaller object of the same weight. (Just imagine throwing a beach ball and a ball bearing of equivalent weights. You'd be able to throw the ball bearing much further than the beach ball.) So, the larger the object, the heavier it must be in order to be thrown a long distance; however, the heavier the object, the more work is required to throw it a long distance. Balancing these two issues to select the ideal object for throwing is no simple task.

...

So the next time you find yourself impressed with a 60 yard pass for a touchdown or pick up a rock to skip across a lake, take a moment to reflect on the hundreds of thousands of years of evolution that have shaped what it means to act, feel, think, and throw like a human.

continue reading

TAGGED: EVOLUTION


RELATED CONTENT

The Descent of Edward Wilson

Richard Dawkins - Prospect 15 Comments

Richard Dawkins's review of The Social Conquest of Earth, by Edward O Wilson (WW Norton, £18.99, May)

Ancient walking mystery deepens

Helen Briggs - BBC News - Science &... 7 Comments

One of the first creatures to step on land could not have walked on four legs, 3D computer models show.

Human Races May Have Biological...

Razib Khan - The Crux - Discover... 89 Comments

Human Races May Have Biological Meaning, But Races Mean Nothing About Humanity

Darwinian Selection Continues to...

- - ScienceDaily 45 Comments

New evidence proves humans are continuing to evolve and that significant natural and sexual selection is still taking place in our species in the modern world.

Where's the Beef? Early Humans Took It

Ann Gibbons - Science - AAAS.org 7 Comments

Cool cats. The skull and jaw of two different species of extinct saber-toothed cats, which lived during the heyday of carnivores 3 million to 3.5 million years ago in the Turkana Basin of Kenya.


Credit: Lars Werdelin/© National Museums of Kenya

Rare Protozoan from Sludge in Norwegian...

- - ScienceDaily 29 Comments

Rare Protozoan from Sludge in Norwegian Lake Does Not Fit On Main Branches of Tree of Life

MORE

MORE BY UNDERSTANDING EVOLUTION

MORE

Comments

Comment RSS Feed

Please sign in or register to comment