“…State‐dependent optimality modeling is a suitable method that is used in biology to determine adaptive decisions in a particular environment, when decisions are interdependent over time, meaning that past decisions affect future options (Houston & McNamara, ; Mangel & Clark, ; for explanation tailored to psychologists, see Frankenhuis, Panchanathan, & Barto, ; Frankenhuis et al., ). Such modeling clearly shows that even if an environment is completely stable within lifetimes, noisy environmental cues often produce substantial mismatch between some individuals' phenotypes and actual conditions (Frankenhuis & Panchanathan, ; Meacham & Bergstrom, ; Panchanathan & Frankenhuis, ). Such mismatch even occurs when: (a) individuals have the opportunity to repeatedly sample cues, (b) individuals obtain cues at no cost throughout their entire lifetimes, and (c) there is a cost to being mismatched.…”