0% found this document useful (0 votes)
12 views14 pages

Problem Solving Notes

Uploaded by

Jheel Tanwar
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
12 views14 pages

Problem Solving Notes

Uploaded by

Jheel Tanwar
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 14

Cognitive

Psychology

Problem Solving Stages

Lesson VIII: Problem Solving


module 37

Problem Solving.37. 1
University of Idaho © Steffen Werner - 2004
Cognitive
Psychology Taxonomy of problems

Goals and operators


– When trying to solve a problem, the problem solver is
trying to achieve a particular goal
– Operators refer to all possible actions / paths a problem
solver can take at each point in time
Well-structured problems
– Clear path to a solution
– Goals and operators are known
Ill-structured problems
– Unclear path to a solution
– Neither the goal, nor the operators,
sometimes even the problem itself is clear

Problem Solving.37. 2
University of Idaho © Steffen Werner - 2004
Cognitive
Psychology The range of problems

Well-structured problems
– 4+5=?
– The ratio of blue socks to red socks is 5:1. How many
socks do you have to pick blindfolded until you have at
least one pair of the same color.
– Cannibals and missionaries
Ill-structured problems
– Connect the following three x x x
points with four straight
lines without moving the x x x
pen from the paper.
$10 challenge: can you x x x
do it with 3 straight lines
(again, don’t move the pen
from the paper!)
Problem Solving.37. 3
University of Idaho © Steffen Werner - 2004
Cognitive
Psychology Problem solving - an overview

How do humans solve problems?


What are common problem-solving problems?

– Stages in the problems-solving process


– Problem solving strategies / heuristics
– What is insight? Incubation?
– Problems in problem solving:
Mental set, functional fixedness, transfer
– Analogies, problem structures
– What makes an expert problem solver?

Problem Solving.37. 4
University of Idaho © Steffen Werner - 2004
Cognitive
Psychology Stages of the problems solving process

Stage model according to Sternberg


– Problem identification
– Problem definition and representation
– Strategy formulation / implementation
– Organization / interpretation of
information
– Resource allocation
– Monitoring
– Evaluation

Problem Solving.37. 5
University of Idaho © Steffen Werner - 2004
Cognitive
Psychology Problem definition and representation

The basic problem


– The ease of a solution often depends on
– … how the problem is phrased (its surface structure)
– … and what underlying assumptions are “imported”
Applied problems
– Most real problems are ill-defined
– Sometime not even the outcome measure can be
agreed upon (e.g., policy making)
– Examples: how can we improve public education?

Problem Solving.37. 6
University of Idaho © Steffen Werner - 2004
Cognitive
Psychology A sample problem

Identify the rule behind each sequence. What is


the next number?
What is the rule behind each sequence?

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 _?

1 8 2 7 3 6 4 _?

8 5 4 9 1 7 6 _?

Problem Solving.37. 7
University of Idaho © Steffen Werner - 2004
Cognitive
Psychology Problem structure

Deep structure vs. surface structure of a problem


– The deep structure of a problem refers to the the
abstract form of the problem
– The surface structure of a problem refers to the context
and in which the problem is embedded
Isomorphic problems
– … are two problems which only differ in their surface
structure, but are based on an identical deep structures
– Example: An accountant can apply his business
knowledge to all kinds of enterprises

Problem Solving.37. 8
University of Idaho © Steffen Werner - 2004
Cognitive
Psychology Isomorphic problem structure

Banana vs. milk example


– GOAL: you want to cut off a quarter of a banana
– You first cut the banana in half
– Then you cut one of the two halves
– GOAL: you want to get a quarter of a gallon of milk and
you only have two large, equal containers of which you
don’t know the volume
– First step: you fill each of the containers so that they
hold the same amount
– Second step: you dump the content of one and
distribute the remaining content between equally
between the two containers
Accounting example
– An accountant can apply his business knowledge to all
kinds of enterprises

Problem Solving.37. 9
University of Idaho © Steffen Werner - 2004
Cognitive
Psychology Problem space (Newell & Simon, 1972)
[Newell & Simon developed the General Problem Solver]

Most well-defined problems can be represented in a


problem space
– Define the current state
– Define all possible transitions from one state to another
state using the possible operators
– Define the goal state
Problem solving then consists of …
– A path from the current state to the goal state
– The transitions indicate the operators to be used
– Computers can use algorithms to find possible paths by
trying a huge number of paths
Humans often rely on heuristics
– heuristic: strategy that often works effectively
Problem Solving.37. 10
University of Idaho © Steffen Werner - 2004
Cognitive
Psychology Problem solving strategies
(efficiency depends on problem representation)

Analysis and hierarchical problem solving


– Breaking the problem up into sub-problems
– Solve series of sub-problems until done
Heuristics
– Means-ends analysis: Reduce distance between current
state and goal state
– Working forward, backward
– Generate and evaluate
Problem solving by analogy
– Try to find an analogous problem (isomorphic problem
structure) that has been solved
– Transform the solution to new problem

Problem Solving.37. 11
University of Idaho © Steffen Werner - 2004
Cognitive
Psychology Organization of information

Which piece of information is relevant?


– Depending on the state of the problem solving process
different parts of the given information are relevant or
have to be sought out
Reinterpretation of information
– Value / interpretation of information can change:
– Example: the series problem earlier in this module
– The woman who married 20 men (textbook)

Problem Solving.37. 12
University of Idaho © Steffen Werner - 2004
Cognitive
Psychology Resource allocation and monitoring

Strategic decisions - metacognition


– How to allocate time? Energy? Money?
– Experts emphasize planning stage
– Novices embark on “local” planning and execution
Monitoring
– State of the problem solving progress
– Re-evaluation of problem solving approach
– Evaluation of distance from goal
– Estimate of problem completion

Problem Solving.37. 13
University of Idaho © Steffen Werner - 2004
Cognitive
Psychology Evaluation

Is this solution a valid / workable solution?


– Checking solution against constraints
– Reorganization of problem solving steps
– Cleaning up
Feeling accompanying insight -
“ah-ha” experience
– Insight: distinctive and sometimes seemingly sudden
understanding of a problem or strategy to solve the
problem. Often reconceptualizing a problem in a new
way.
– Pieces “fall into place” - Evaluation feels redundant.

Problem Solving.37. 14
University of Idaho © Steffen Werner - 2004

You might also like