Academic literature on the topic 'Human intuition'

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Journal articles on the topic "Human intuition":

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Borden, Andrew. "Human Intuition and Decision-making Systems." Information & Security: An International Journal 1, no. 2 (1998): 67–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.11610/isij.0117.

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McLarty, Colin. "Poincaré on the value of reasoning machines." Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society 61, no. 3 (May 15, 2024): 411–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1090/bull/1822.

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Hilbert’s Foundations of Geometry in 1899 made Poincaré think of “reasoning machines” before Hilbert did. Poincaré found the idea “deadly for teaching, and desiccating for researchers” but indispensable for telling when intuitions have been fully expressed. A machine will use stated axioms without the vague intuitions Poincaré considered vital to learning and research. Years of famously intuitive creativity, plus boundless faith in technology, as well as the impact of Hilbert, led Poincaré to see that machines could aid human intuition but not replace it, precisely because machines have no intuition. This relates to recent machine achievements in Lean and HoTT, and to the issues in Akshay Venkatesh’s essay.
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Kronman, Linda. "Intuition Machines." A Peer-Reviewed Journal About 9, no. 1 (August 4, 2020): 54–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.7146/aprja.v9i1.121489.

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The urgency of environmental, security, economic and political crises in the early twenty-first century has propelled the use of machine vision to aid human decision-making. These developments have led to strategies in which functions of human intuitive processing have been externalized to ‘vision machines’ in the hope of optimized and objective insights. I argue that we should approach these replacements of human nonconscious functions as ‘intuition machines.’ I apply this approach through a close reading of artworks which expose the hid- den labour required to train a machine. These artworks demonstrate how human agency shapes the ways that machines perceive the world and reveal how values and biases are hardcoded into nonconscious cognitive machine vision systems. Thus, my analysis suggests that decisions made by such systems cannot be considered fundamentally objective or true. Nevertheless, artworks also exemplify how externalized intuitive processing can still be helpful as long as we refrain from blindly taking the results as a go-signal to take immediate action.
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Johanssen, Jacob, and Xin Wang. "Artificial Intuition in Tech Journalism on AI: Imagining the Human Subject." Human-Machine Communication 2 (January 15, 2021): 173–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.30658/hmc.2.9.

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Artificial intuition (AI acting intuitively) is one trend in artificial intelligence. This article analyzes how it is discussed by technology journalism on the internet. The journalistic narratives that were analyzed claim that intuition can make AI more efficient, autonomous, and human. Some commentators also write that intuitive AI could execute tasks better than humans themselves ever could (e.g., in digital games); therefore, it could ultimately surpass human intuition. Such views do not pay enough attention to biases as well as transparency and explainability of AI. We contrast the journalistic narratives with philosophical understandings of intuition and a psychoanalytic view of the human. Those perspectives allow for a more complex view that goes beyond the focus on rationality and computational perspectives of tech journalism.
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Lebedev, I. B., and A. M. Sultanova. "PSYCHOLOGICAL PECULIARITIES OF POLICE OFFICERS INTUITION STUDY." Current Issues of the State and Law, no. 7 (2018): 125–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.20310/2587-9340-2018-2-7-125-132.

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We consider main aspects of intuition as a psychological phenomenon and its peculiarities in legal defending activity. The difficulty of the topic is noted according to intuition irrational nature. We study the historical aspect of intuitive human mind development from the earliest to the modern time and find differences in the information part of the world understanding. The reasons for formation of intuitive thinking of Internal Affairs Agencies workers in untypical situations are explained. The research has the scheme of conditions for intuition provocation, among which there are the problem situation, “hint” availability, fundamental understanding of the issue. In Russia the psychological service of Ministry of Internal Affairs investigates intuitive abilities of Internal Affairs Agencies workers. There are methods types of intuition study: experimental methods and action tests; surveys; instrumental methods showing priming; implicit learning; “illocal” intuition; psychophysiological methods. The essence of experimental methods, action-tests and instrumental methods are shown. The conclusions of necessity of to practically include developments obtained in the process of intuition thinking investigation of Internal Affairs Agencies are made. The peculiarities of intuition study within the framework of psychological researches. We consider the role of intuition in professional activity of Internal Affairs Agencies workers. We tried to create methodological tools of intuition study of police workers.
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Miles, Andrew, and Eugene Sadler-Smith. "“With recruitment I always feel I need to listen to my gut”: the role of intuition in employee selection." Personnel Review 43, no. 4 (May 27, 2014): 606–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/pr-04-2013-0065.

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Purpose – This qualitative study of managers’ use of intuition in the selection process aimed to understand if and how managers use intuition in employee hiring decisions and suggest ways in which the use of intuition might be improved. The paper aims to discuss these issues. Design/methodology/approach – Semi-structured, in-depth interviews were conducted with managers from a range of backgrounds, and with varying experience of recruitment and selection. Findings – Findings revealed that reasons for the use of intuition included personal preferences, resource constraints and recognition of the limitations of more structured approaches. Intuition was used an indicator for performance, personality and person-environment fit. Intuition tended to be used with requisite caution; participants were aware of its limits, the potential for bias and the difficulties in justifying its use; several participants used their intuitions in concert with more structured, non-intuition based approaches. Research limitations/implications – The small-scale investigative study has limited generalisability. The paper concludes with five specific recommendations on how to improve managers’ understanding and use of intuition in employee selection. Originality/value – Despite increased interest in intuition in management there is a paucity of qualitative studies of intuition-in-use in management in general and in personnel in particular. This research helps to fill this gap.
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Van den Brink, Nydia, Birgit Holbrechts, Paul L. P. Brand, Erik C. F. Stolper, and Paul Van Royen. "Role of intuitive knowledge in the diagnostic reasoning of hospital specialists: a focus group study." BMJ Open 9, no. 1 (January 2019): e022724. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2018-022724.

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Background and objectiveIntuition is an important part of human decision-making and can be explained by the dual-process theory where analytical and non-analytical reasoning processes continually interact. These processes can also be identified in physicians’ diagnostic reasoning. The valuable role of intuition, including gut feelings, has been shown among general practitioners and nurses, but less is known about its role among hospital specialists. This study focused on the diagnostic reasoning of hospital specialists, how they value, experience and use intuition.Design and participantsTwenty-eight hospital specialists in the Netherlands and Belgium participated in six focus groups. The discussions were recorded, transcribed verbatim and thematically coded. A circular and iterative analysis was applied until data saturation was achieved.ResultsDespite initial reservations regarding the term intuition, all participants agreed that intuition plays an important role in their diagnostic reasoning process. Many agreed that intuition could guide them, but were cautious not to be misguided. They were especially cautious since intuition does not have probative force, for example, in medicolegal situations. ‘On-the-job experience’ was regarded as a precondition to relying on intuition. Some participants viewed intuition as non-rational and invalid. All participants said that intuitive hunches must be followed by analytical reasoning. Cultural differences were not found. Both the doctor as a person and his/her specialty were seen as important determinants for using intuition.ConclusionsHospital specialists use intuitive elements in their diagnostic reasoning, in line with general human decision-making models. Nevertheless, they appear to disagree more on its role and value than previous research has shown among general practitioners. A better understanding of how to take advantage of intuition, while avoiding pitfalls, and how to develop ‘skilled’ intuition may improve the quality of hospital specialists’ diagnostic reasoning.
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Antle, Alissa N., Greg Corness, and Milena Droumeva. "Human-computer-intuition? Exploring the cognitive basis for intuition in embodied interaction." International Journal of Arts and Technology 2, no. 3 (2009): 235. http://dx.doi.org/10.1504/ijart.2009.028927.

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Sinclair, Marta, Neal M. Ashkanasy, and Prithviraj Chattopadhyay. "Affective antecedents of intuitive decision making." Journal of Management & Organization 16, no. 3 (July 2010): 382–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1833367200002030.

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AbstractAlthough the use of intuition in managerial decisions has been documented, many questions about the intuitive process and its antecedent stages remain unanswered, in particular the role of affective traits and states. The study reported in this article investigates whether decision makers who are more attuned to own emotions and experience a particular mood have an easier access to intuition. Our findings indicate that emotional awareness has indeed a positive effect on the use of intuition, which appears to be stronger for women. Surprisingly, positive and negative mood seem to influence intuition according to their intensity rather than positive/negative distinction.
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Sinclair, Marta, Neal M. Ashkanasy, and Prithviraj Chattopadhyay. "Affective antecedents of intuitive decision making." Journal of Management & Organization 16, no. 3 (July 2010): 382–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.5172/jmo.16.3.382.

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AbstractAlthough the use of intuition in managerial decisions has been documented, many questions about the intuitive process and its antecedent stages remain unanswered, in particular the role of affective traits and states. The study reported in this article investigates whether decision makers who are more attuned to own emotions and experience a particular mood have an easier access to intuition. Our findings indicate that emotional awareness has indeed a positive effect on the use of intuition, which appears to be stronger for women. Surprisingly, positive and negative mood seem to influence intuition according to their intensity rather than positive/negative distinction.

Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Human intuition":

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Rubinovitz, Yasmine. "News Matter : embedding human intuition in machine intelligence through interactive data visualizations." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/112544.

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Thesis: S.M., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, School of Architecture and Planning, Program in Media Arts and Sciences, 2017.
Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 87-92).
In this era of luxurious information, we are free to access as many news stories as we want. However, news is so abundant that people don't have the time to consume all of it, nor the time to select which stories they want to know about. We trust editors and algorithms to decide for us, giving away our control and sometimes missing the big picture. For computers, news stories are usually not annotated or categorized, they come in as an unstructured text that for machines is hard to generalize. While numerous tools exist that use Natural Language Processing to identify features of news articles, few use NLP to help readers navigate the universe of news stories. This thesis proposes a novel interaction method, coupling principles of data visualization and user experience with an interactive machine learning approach to ease our understanding and exploration of mass information while collecting nuanced annotations for the same information. We present a human machine collaboration where the computer analyzes and renders the data, making it easier for the reader to explore. The user in turn gives annotated labels that help the computer better analyze the next data points. As a proof of concept, we present Panorama, an interface for open, transparent and collaborative exploration of news. Panorama addresses information overload, by allowing users to filter, organize and control their news feed. Panorama is also an interactive machine learning system. As the user reads and explores the news that were analyzed by machine learning models, she is encouraged to submit feedback that is sent back to these underlying models, helping them improve. This work explores the relationship between knowledge and design. It demonstrates how data visualization and interfaces help humans understand, build, control and improve a system based on machine intelligence.
by Yasmine Rubinovitz.
S.M.
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Aczel, Balazs. "Attention and awareness in human learning and decision making." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2010. https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/224472.

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This dissertation presents an investigation of the modifying role of attention and awareness in human learning and decision making. A series of experiments showed that performance in a range of tests of unconscious cognition can be better explained as resulting from conscious attention rather than from implicit processes. The first three experiments utilised a modification of the Serial Reaction Time task in order to measure the interaction of implicit and explicit learning processes. The results did not show evidence for an interaction, but did exhibit an effect of explicit knowledge of the underlying rules of the task. Subsequent studies examined the role of selective attention in learning. The investigation failed to provide evidence that learning inevitably results from the simple presentation of contingent stimuli over repeated trials. Instead, the learning effects appeared to be modulated by explicit attention to the association between stimuli. The following study with a novel test designed to measure the role of selective attention in prediction learning demonstrated that learning is not an obligatory consequence of simultaneous activation of representations of the associated stimuli. Rather, learning occurred only when attention was drawn explicitly to the association between the stimuli. Finally, the Deliberation without Attention Paradigm was tested in a replication study along with two novel versions of the task. Additional assessment of the conscious status of participants' judgments indicated that explicit deliberation and memory could best explain the effect and that the original test may not be a reliable measure of intuition. In summary, the data in these studies did not require explanation in terms of unconscious cognition. These results do not preclude the possibility that unconscious processes could occur in these or other designs. However, the present work emphasises the role conscious attention plays in human learning and decision making.
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Duros, Vasilios. "Polyoxometalates and crystallisation space : an artificial intelligence-assisted exploration and comparison with human intuition." Thesis, University of Glasgow, 2018. http://theses.gla.ac.uk/39011/.

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The discovery of new inorganic molecules is an interesting problem since it implies an extended understanding of two contingent events: the first one is the formation of a new molecule, and the second is its crystallisation. The reason for that is that in the case of the product formation (and in order to make a discovery) the conditions under which the building blocks assemble have to be found, while in the case of crystallisation the conditions under which the product aggregates into crystals (which can be a subregion of the potential synthesis conditions) need to be identified in order to be isolated and characterised. There are a vast number of combinations of the experimental conditions and the coordination modes of the transition metals taking part in the building blocks, which means that a full exploration of the chemical space of any given compound would be impossible. As a result, the intuition of highly trained and experienced chemists is required in order to design the appropriate experiments that will determine the right conditions for the isolation of any new products. Unfortunately, intuitions of the experimenters can be biased by both the current knowledge of the field and their frame of mind, which makes important discoveries difficult to achieve. The work presented in this thesis is focused on the field of polyoxometalate chemistry and is exploring a multidisciplinary approach to probe the interaction of artificial intelligence methods with the human intuition during the process of exploring the crystallisation space. Our fundamental difference with relative work in the field is the application of active learning methods (which consist of methodologies capable of deciding what experiments to perform next in order to collect data that will improve the understanding of our system) in contrast to the data mining methods and simulations that have been employed so far. This algorithm method is compared to how human experimenters approach the exploration of the crystallisation space, and their performances are evaluated in terms of prediction accuracies and volume coverage. In this case, the human experimenters are allowed to follow whichever exploration strategy they see fit in order to address the task at hand. Finally, the same algorithm method is extended into collaborating with the human experimenters, and we will study the way the inherent biases can affect the search of the experimental space. This interaction is accomplished with the algorithm suggesting a set number of experiments and the human experimenter selecting the ones they seem appropriate to complete their task.
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Yaldir, Hulya. "Ibn Sina (Avicenna) and Rene Descartes on the mind and body problem." Thesis, University of Reading, 1999. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.301933.

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Zhang, Yuyan. "Toward an explanation of HR professionals' intuition-based hiring in a decision-making context." Bowling Green State University / OhioLINK, 2017. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=bgsu1498404980328294.

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White, Timothy J. "On the exploitation of human inductive thought and intuition in future global command and control architectures." Thesis, Monterey, Calif. : Springfield, Va. : Naval Postgraduate School ; Available from National Technical Information Service, 1993. http://handle.dtic.mil/100.2/ADA268942.

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Daniel, Robert S. "Disciplined intuition subjective aspects of judgment and decision making in Child Protective Services /." Diss., Texas A&M University, 2003. http://hdl.handle.net/1969/160.

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Bengtsson, Per. "Intuitivt kontrollschema : En möjlighet till ökad lärbarhet för spelkontroller." Thesis, Högskolan i Skövde, Institutionen för informationsteknologi, 2017. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:his:diva-13622.

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Spelare behöver lära sig kontrollera ett spel innan de kan få en god upplevelse, men det kan ofta vara svårt att lära sig använda en handkontroll. Naturlig mappning, affordance och tutorials hjälper enbart i vissa fall. Det finns dock indikationer på att intuitiva kontroller skulle kunna fungera, men ingen forskning inom området existerar. Detta arbete syftar till att jämföra lärbarheten hos två olika kontrollscheman, där det ena utvecklats för att vara intuitivt för nyblivna spelare. Kvalitativa och semistrukturerade intervjuer användes för att undersöka vad som är ett intuitivt kontrollschema. En prototyp av ett spel skapades, och denna kunde spelas med båda kontrollschemana. Genom att observera hur nyblivna spelare använde kontrollschemana utvärderades och jämfördes deras respektive lärbarhet. Resultatet visade att det intuitiva kontrollschemat förefaller ha högre lärbarhet än det alternativa kontrollschemat. Problem att hitta lämpliga deltagare samt med utvecklingen av det icke intuitiva kontrollschemat gör dock att arbetets trovärdighet är diskutabelt.
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Urbaniak, Jakub. "Why isn’t it like it should be? : Buddhist and Christian intuition of the wretchedness of the human condition in the life and writings of Emile Cioran." Brest, 2009. http://www.theses.fr/2009BRES1010.

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According to the main thesis which I try to prove within the framework of my analysis, the life and work of Emile Cioran constitutes a space in which the universal intuition of the wretchedness of the human condition, in the shape given to it by Buddhism and Christianity, expresses itself in a unique and unusually intensive way. The tension between the Buddhist and the Christian temptation seems constitutive of all the Romanian’s thought, and it reaches its apogee at the intersection of the Buddhist and the Christian vision of suffering. Cioran’s reflection on the situation of man “fallen into time” corresponds with the Buddhist experience of emptiness and the devilish vision of history, specific for Gnosticism; the doctrine of ignorance and desire as the sources of suffering and the conception of the original sin as the determinant of the condition of worldly man; the notion of nirvana as the extinction of suffering and the idea of the Last Judgement as settling accounts with history
La thèse de notre recherche pose comme objectif la démonstration que la vie et la création philosophique d’Émile Cioran sont une manifestation, unique et d’intensité extrême, de l’intuition universelle de l’infortune de la condition humaine comprise dans la forme qui lui est imposée par le bouddhisme et le christianisme. La tension entre ces traditions semble être constitutive de toute réflexion de Cioran, atteignant son apogée dans l’approche que chacun de ces systèmes fait de la question de la souffrance. L’approche cioranienne se rapporte à l’expérience bouddhiste de la vacuité ainsi qu’à une vision démoniaque de l’histoire propre au gnosticisme; à l’enseignement sur l’ignorance et le désir, considérés comme sources de la souffrance, tout aussi bien qu’au concept du péché originel, considéré comme déterminant de la condition humaine; à la notion du nirvana, compris en tant que cessation de la souffrance, ainsi qu’à l’idée du Jugement dernier en tant que récapitulation de l’histoire
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Weber, Pia, and Guillaume Noizet. "Artificial Intelligence : An approach for decision-making in crisis management." Thesis, Umeå universitet, Företagsekonomi, 2018. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-150150.

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The interest in crisis management is increasing for some decades now, since researchers and organizations have realized that crises can endanger them severely and that all kinds of organization are potentially under the constant threat of crises. Artificial intelligence (AI) is also in the heart of the attention as some tasks, traditionally occupied by humans, are already replaced by AI agents, and the fast development achieves more and more promising results. As the core of AI, decision-making has been identified, which itself can also completely change the outcome of a crisis. Thus, the idea to explore the junction of these two fields in the light of decision-making processes appeared to be highly inter-esting. Therefore, the purpose of this paper is: first, to find out what is really important in deci-sion-making processes in crisis management, second, to figure out abilities and limita-tions for human and artificial intelligences, and lastly, how artificial intelligence can af-fect important characteristics of decision-making processes in a foreseeable period of time. Putting all together led to the research question: How artificial intelligence can affect decision-making processes in crisis management? To guide these efforts, a qualitative method with an interpretivist approach has been cho-sen. Therefore, crisis experts (managers and consultants) and AI experts (researchers and developers) were interviewed. Also, notes were taken from a conference about artificial intelligence. As a result, it has been found out that speed and comprehensiveness are two crucial fac-tors when making decisions in crisis situations. Additionally, empirical findings figured out that this approach needs to be extended by the two decision parameters short- and long-term effect as it is not just about decision-making itself, but also about the feasibility and future consequences of decisions made. A model for ‘successful decision-making in crisis situations’ could be developed and the roles of intuition and rationality as well as abilities and limitations were clarified for both, human and artificial intelligence. Based on this understanding, artificial and human intelligence could have been placed within our model, showing the complement nature of them. Finally, an exploratory an-swer to the research question could be derived, presented as short-, medium-, and long-term perspectives. Even though crisis management can be expected to be one of the last organizational fields invested by AI, the results show that there are great benefits of ap-plying AI in crisis management, leading in a high potential that AI will change the picture dramatically.

Books on the topic "Human intuition":

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Raami, Asta. Intuition unleashed: On the application and development of intuition in the creative process. Helsinki, Finland: Aalto University, 2015.

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Duggan, William R. Strategic Intuition: The Creative Spark in Human Achievement. New York: Columbia University Press, 2008.

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Fitz, Hope K. Intuition: Its nature and uses in human experience. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass Publishers, 2001.

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Weigend, Michael. Intuition and computer programming (WT). Hauppauge, N.Y: Nova Science Publishers, 2010.

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Kolańczyk, Alina. Intuicyjność procesów przetwarzania informacji. Gdańsk: Uniwersytet Gdański, 1991.

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Dreyfus, Hubert L. Mind over machine: The power of human intuition and expertise in the era of the computer. Oxford, UK: B. Blackwell, 1986.

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Dreyfus, Hubert L. Mind over machine: The power of human intuition and expertise in the era of the computer. New York: Free Press, 1986.

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MacGregor, Catriona, and Debra J. Snyder. Intuitive parenting: Listening to the wisdom of your heart. New York, NY: Atria Paperback, 2010.

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Llamzon, Benjamin S. A humane case for moral intuition. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1993.

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Burgoa, Lorenzo Vicente. Mitos y problemas de la intuición humana: Estudio filosófico. Murcia: Publicaciones UCAM, 2010.

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Book chapters on the topic "Human intuition":

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Nuthall, P. L. "Intuition." In Farm business management: the human factor, 154–77. Wallingford: CABI, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1079/9781789240733.0154.

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Schreiber, Ian, and Brenda Romero. "Probability and Human Intuition." In Game Balance, 491–508. Boca Raton: CRC Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781315156422-20.

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Mengov, George. "Choice by Intuition." In Decision Science: A Human-Oriented Perspective, 119–47. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-47122-7_6.

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Nonaka, Ikujiro, and Ichiro Yamaguchi. "Phenomenology Is a Voracious Discipline: Encompassing Both Natural and Human Sciences." In Management by Eidetic Intuition, 13–24. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-6851-7_2.

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Shtulman, Andrew. "Navigating the conflict between science and intuition." In Multidisciplinary Perspectives on Representational Pluralism in Human Cognition, 122–40. New York: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003189930-8.

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Hermkes, Rico, and Hanna Mach. "An Inferential View on Human Intuition and Expertise." In Model-Based Reasoning in Science and Technology, 274–86. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-32722-4_16.

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Stroeken, Koen. "Chapter Fourteen: Intuition, Destiny, Love." In Simplex Society, 273–80. Cham: Springer Nature Switzerland, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-41115-1_16.

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AbstractDating apps, quantum computation and election of the GOAT in any domain are three cases that illustrate the antagonism of simplex society with intuition and particularly with the claim to intuit destiny.The chapter takes its cue from the oldest remedy against simplex society. The magic of love, how could dating apps capture it? The apps are a cure worsening the problem because they enhance the simplex of chance. Intuition approaches love as destiny.Events should be situated in the middle between the given, the pregiven and the immitted. Intuition is the extent to which one captures that middle. It is the human sense of reality. Being conscious of an immission is pre-ception, perceiving an event before it occurs.
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Thoma, Volker, and Elliott P. White. "In Two Minds about Usability? Rationality and Intuition in Usability Evaluations." In Human-Computer Interaction – INTERACT 2011, 544–47. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-23768-3_78.

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Sanguineti, Vincenzo R. "The Neural/Mental Gap: Intuition, Self and Ego, a Trilingual Map." In The Rosetta Stone of the Human Mind, 91–99. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-86415-6_9.

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Lüdtke, Ulrike M., and Hanna Ehlert. "Linguistic Feeling: A Relational Approach Incorporating Epistemology, Theories of Language, and Human-Machine Interaction." In Emotions, Metacognition, and the Intuition of Language Normativity, 317–43. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-17913-6_12.

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Conference papers on the topic "Human intuition":

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Faste, Haakon. "Intuition in Design." In CHI '17: CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3025453.3025534.

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Hanák, Róbert. "Are Deliberative People More Consistent in Decision Making?" In Applied Human Factors and Ergonomics Conference. AHFE International, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.54941/ahfe100187.

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The preference for intuition and deliberation scale (PID) as a cognitive style measure was used to investigate whether more deliberative participants (identified by self-report PID inventory) would also show higher motivation to properly and normatively solve a task designed to measure their inconsistency and discrimination to details (CWS Index). 161 (103 women) managers and administrative workers were asked to evaluate 21 fictional job candidates. The decision task was designed so that participants could work according to their preferences – everyone had enough time to analyse the logic behind the task. Significant differences were found among all four groups (deliberative, intuitive, both below median, both above median) in levels of inconsistency. Totally consistent respondents were significantly more likely to be from the deliberative and mixed (high in deliberation and in intuition) groups.
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Sanda, Mohammed-Aminu, Lilian Ama Afun, Anna Alacovska, and Obi Berko Damoah. "Humane Entrepreneurship in the Creative Fashion Industry: Role of Entrepreneurs’ Intuition on Entrepreneurial Decision-making and Performance." In AHFE 2023 Hawaii Edition. AHFE International, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.54941/ahfe1004255.

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The purpose of this study was to identify the humane-oriented factors that are predictive of creative entrepreneurs’ intuition, decision-making and entrepreneurial performances, and also to establish the dynamics between their intuitions, decision-making and entrepreneurial performances when engaged in their entrepreneurial activities. The study was informed by the realization that the traditional concept of entrepreneurship has mainly focused on new venture creation with the entrepreneur at the centre of all entrepreneurial activities. But with the changing tide of conceptualization, the human aspect of entrepreneurship has evolved as humane entrepreneurship and is operationalized as the pursuit of entrepreneurial growth and humane development for opportunity realization and sustainable organization. Yet, unlike the application of the business aspect of entrepreneurship in established firms, the human aspect of the creative entrepreneurial approaches are often overlooked, and thus represent a knowledge gap. Thus, in the pursuit of filling such gap, exploring the human-oriented dynamics in entrepreneurship has attracted much attention and continue to gain currency in humane entrepreneurship research. In this stead, the following questions were explored relative to creative entrepreneurs’ entrepreneurial activities in the Ghanaian fashion industry. (i) what factors are predictive of the entrepreneurs’ intuitions, and decision-making as well as their entrepreneurial performance. (ii) is there an influencing association between the entrepreneurs’ intuitions, decision-making and entrepreneurial. Using the quantitative philosophical approach informed by the entrepreneurs’ subjective evaluations of their intuitions in decision-making and entrepreneurial performance was enabled, data was obtained from 728 respondents operating in the Ghanaian creative fashion industry. Analytical Findings from principal components analysis identified seven (7) factors that are predictive of the Entrepreneurs’ intuitions in decision-making, eight (8) factors that are predictive of their entrepreneurial decision-making, and ten (10) factors that are predictive of their entrepreneurial performances. The influencing association between the entrepreneurs’ intuitions, decision-making and entrepreneurial is also established. The study outcome provides an important insight on the dynamics of human-factors in creative entrepreneurship and the influencing significance of entrepreneurs’ intuition in their entrepreneurial performances. The insights provide human-oriented perspectives that could enable educators associate with the neuroergonomics constraints in creative entrepreneurship development over the past years and the impact it has, and continue to have, on individuals in developing economies who desire to create business around their creativities. The study outcome provides a good understanding of the influence of creative entrepreneurs’ intuitions on their entrepreneurial performances in the to educators and administrators, which could be used to effectively design a humane-centered creative entrepreneurship skills and practices in the Ghanaian fashion industry.
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Keršič, Vid. "Interactive Evolutionary Computation Approach to Permutation Flow Shop Scheduling Problem." In 7th Student Computer Science Research Conference. University of Maribor Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.18690/978-961-286-516-0.8.

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Artificial intelligence and its subfields have be-come part of our everyday lives and eÿciently solve many problems that are very hard for us humans. But in some tasks, these methods strug-gle, while we, humans, are much better solvers with our intuition. Because of that, the ques-tion arises: why not combine intelligent methods with human skills and intuition? This paper pro-poses an Interactive Evolutionary Computation approach to the Permutation Flow Shop Schedul-ing Problem by incorporating human-in-the-loop in MAX-MIN Ant System through gamification of the problem. The analysis shows that combin-ing the evolutionary computation approach and human-in-the-loop leads to better solutions, sig-nificantly when the complexity of the problem in-creases.
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Simões-Marques, Mario, M. Filomena Teodoro, and Isabel L. Nunes. "Decision-making in disaster operations - Intuition vs Intelligent System support." In 13th International Conference on Applied Human Factors and Ergonomics (AHFE 2022). AHFE International, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.54941/ahfe1002132.

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The paper presents a study where human decision-making is benchmarked against IS recommendations in a disaster management context. Data collection was done in tabletop exercise sessions where the participants played the role of disaster managers, engaged on decisions scenarios of increasing complexity. Initially, participants were asked to make assignment decisions without any IS advice. Later they were exposed to the advice of the an IS to assess if participants accepted the solutions proposed by the IS as satisficing, considering the explanations provided by the IS. Results suggest that decision-makers tend to rely increasingly in intuition as complexity increases, and welcome the recommendations of IS as satisficing, considering the decision-making process easier with this type of support.
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Weidong Tao. "Studies of human-computer interaction system based on trust intuition learning theory." In 2010 2nd International Conference on Computer Engineering and Technology. IEEE, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iccet.2010.5486138.

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Abbasi, Merium Fazal, Muhammad Bilal, and Kumeel Rasheed. "Role of Human Intuition in AI Aided Managerial Decision Making: A Review." In 2022 International Conference on Decision Aid Sciences and Applications (DASA). IEEE, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/dasa54658.2022.9765153.

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Forsyth, Darryl. "The role of intuition in the selection process: Elite athlete selection." In Annual International Conference on Human Resource Management and Professional Development in the Digital Age. Global Science & Technology Forum (GSTF), 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.5176/2251-2349_hrmpd50.

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Mueller, Florian 'Floyd', Stefanie Kethers, Leila Alem, and Ross Wilkinson. "From the certainty of information transfer to the ambiguity of intuition." In the 20th conference of the computer-human interaction special interest group (CHISIG) of Australia. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1228175.1228189.

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Brixi, Radim. "Human Prediction of Computer Generated Value Based on Statistical Experimental Approach Intuition in Human-Computer Interaction Research." In 2nd International Symposium on Computer, Communication, Control and Automation. Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/3ca-13.2013.33.

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Reports on the topic "Human intuition":

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Martinez, Kimberly D., and Gaojian Huang. Exploring the Effects of Meaningful Tactile Display on Perception and Preference in Automated Vehicles. Mineta Transportation Institute, October 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.31979/mti.2022.2164.

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There is an existing issue in human-machine interaction, such that drivers of semi-autonomous vehicles are still required to take over control of the vehicle during system limitations. A possible solution may lie in tactile displays, which can present status, direction, and position information while avoiding sensory (e.g., visual and auditory) channels overload to reliably help drivers make timely decisions and execute actions to successfully take over. However, limited work has investigated the effects of meaningful tactile signals on takeover performance. This study synthesizes literature investigating the effects of tactile displays on takeover performance in automated vehicles and conducts a human-subject study to design and test the effects of six meaningful tactile signal types and two pattern durations on drivers’ perception and performance during automated driving. The research team performed a literature review of 18 articles that conducted human-subjects experiments on takeover performance utilizing tactile displays as takeover requests. Takeover performance in these studies were highlighted, such as response times, workload, and accuracy. The team then conducted a human-subject experiment, which included 16 participants that used a driving simulator to present 30 meaningful vibrotactile signals, randomly across four driving sessions measuring for reaction times (RTs), interpretation accuracy, and subjective ratings. Results from the literature suggest that tactile displays can present meaningful vibrotactile patterns via various in-vehicle locations to help improve drivers’ performance during the takeover and can be used to assist in the design of human-machine interfaces (HMI) for automated vehicles. The experiment yielded results illustrating higher urgency patterns were associated with shorter RTs and higher intuitive ratings. Also, pedestrian status and headway reduction signals presented shorter RTs and increased confidence ratings compared to other tactile signal types. Finally, the signal types that yielded the highest accuracy were the surrounding vehicle and navigation signal types. Implications of these findings may lie in informing the design of next-generation in-vehicle HMIs and future human factors studies on human-automation interactions.

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