Quantitative Intuition II: The Bayesian Brain’s Achilles Heel

In a previous posting (“Quantitative Intuition: It’s Not Counterintuitive”) I described some of the advancements that have been made in bringing together the disparate worlds of quantitative methods and human intuition, ending on the rather happy note that advanced scientific micromarketing models today are capable of introducing qualitative human judgment and experience into quantitative models, such that the models are able to “learn” from humans about important factors such as competitive threats, nuanced negotiation strategies and even meteorological vagaries – factors that traditionally have been difficult to crunch into the binary 1s and 0s of machine language.  The human brain works in a hierarchical manner, embedding propositions within propositions to think a potentially infinite number of thoughts.   In the example I used in the last posting, a sales rep who reads about a national wholesaler coming to town to open a discount distribution center can nearly instantaneously form a series of mental propositions to evaluate the importance of that news and the probability of potential outcomes that may (or may not) require decisive competitive action from the sales rep’s firm. Continue reading