“…While several approaches exist that specifically consider ill‐defined tasks (Firby, 1987; Jiménez, De La Rosa, Fernández, Fernández, & Borrajo, 2012), they are ill‐suited to explain the cognitive processes involved in human planning and action selection as they are either infeasible or inefficient in real‐world settings (Georgievski & Aiello, 2015). There are several data sets available that consider everyday activities, but without studying human action selection behavior, instead focusing on motion segmentation and action recognition (Damen, D. et al., 2018; Rohrbach et al., 2016; Rybok, Friedberger, Hanebeck, & Stiefelhagen, 2011; Tenorth, Bandouch, & Beetz, 2009), collecting biosignals of everyday activities (Meier, Mason, Porzel, Putze, & Schultz, 2018), and understanding causal dependencies of actions (Uhde, Berberich, Ramirez‐Amaro, & Cheng, 2020).…”