lecture 9- problem-solving & reasoning Flashcards
(21 cards)
what are the two states in problem solving?
- current position (where are)
- goal (where want to be)
route between them not clear and takes multiple steps
what are the properties of problem solving?
- purposeful (goal-directed, have to be aware of goal, not driven by habit)
- controlled process (not fully automatic)
- BECAUSE we lack appropriate knowledge to generate immediate solution
- e.g making tea in new kitchen- route not clear as don’t know where everything is so multiple subgoals
what did Goel & Grafman (2000) find about the role of frontal lobe in problem solving?
- architect with frontal lobe lesion
- asked to design office space
- layered, incomplete drawings
- some experience/knowledge from past so can put something down, but not clear
- struggled to progress from problem structuring to problem solving
- linguistic abilities and memory fine
what are the categories of problems?
- well-defined: current position, possible moves, goal well-specified (chess- know possible moves for each piece, goal to take king)
- ill-defined: current position, possible moves, goal not well-specified (being happy- multiple ways, what is happy)
- knowledge-rich: only solvable via relevant knowledge (chess)
- knowledge-lean: can be solved without needing prior knowledge, all information contained in presentation of problem (lab experiements)
what is an example of a knowledge-lean problem?
- monty hall
- 3 doors- goat behind 2 of them, car behind the other
- pick a door, reveals goat- do you keep door you selected or switch to remaining door?
what is insight?
- sudden, discrete change in mind that contributes to solution
- subjective experience- ‘ah ha!’ moment where goes form not solved -> solved
what did Metcalfe & Wiebe (1987) find when trying characterise how people got insight?
- p’s rated ‘warmth’ during problem solving task (warmth = proximity to solution_
- for problems including insight, sudden increase in ‘warmth’ (rapid, sudden progress)
- for problems solved without insight, gradual increase in ‘warmth’ (slow accumulation to goal)
what did Jung-Beeman (2004) find about the neural associate to insight?
- gave 3 words: fence, card, master
- gave word that can precede: post
- indicates ‘insight’ for particular trials
- increased activity in superior temporal gyrus
- correlates, doesn’t mean causates
is insight a separate process, or does it just differ in phenomenology (i.e subjective experience?)
- insight is ‘real’ in sense that people experience it (can measure- there is a neural correlate)
- but may not be separate cognitive process (higher order processes may gradually arrive at solution, but only become aware once threshold reached)
- gradual accumulation concept may differ in sense depending on nature of problem (well-defined, ill-defined etc.)
what study did Ellis et al. (2011) do on gradual accumulation towards insight?
- anagram task: KAFMS, asked to solve anagram to find word with one letter not being in answer (MASK-F not in)
- record eye movement
- p’s reported sudden solution
- but gradual decrease in fixations on non-relevant letter before report (look at F less and less)
- gradual accumulation of knowledge towards solution despite subjective ‘a ha’ experience
what is incubation?
- stop directly thinking about the problem for a period of time
- most have experienced the feeling of solving a problem during this problem
- Sio & Ormerod: incubation led to small but consistent improvements in problem solving
- Wagner: sleep is a version of incubation, sleep increased insight
how can we facilitate insight/ increase probability of solving a problem?
hints, incubation and sleep
what did Newell & Simon find about strategies for problem-solving?
- limited STM capacity (cannot hold too many pieces of info in mind at the same time- steps)
- complex info processing happens serially
- forced with tradeoff between accuracy, computational complexity and time
- humans rely on heuristics- computationally cheap rules of thumb that produces reasonably accurate answers
what is means-end analysis?
- form subgoal in between to minimise distance between current location and goal, then move towards subgoal
- BUT this requires info about location of final goal
- what if better strategy to move away from final goal
- as can set wrong subgoal that moves further away from end goal before moving back towards
what is hill-climbing?
- change present state to a state closer to end goal
- simpler than means-end as no explicit ‘subgoal’
- analogous to climbing hill by always moving to next highest point
- can get caught in local maxima when can go around which is less effort but get to global maximum easier
what strategy also helps that’s not heuristics (means-end, hill-climbing etc.)? ehat did Koppenol-Gonzalez et al. (2010) do?
- planning before try to reach goal (useful when goal involves sequence of behaviours)
- tower of london task- certain arrangment in limited no. moves
- p’s who spent longer deliberately planning moves before acting performed better with fewer errors
how does progress monitoring help problem solving? MacGregor et al. (2001)
- performance worse when p’s thought progress was being made
- when realised progress was slow, most likely to switch strategies
- but how is progress measured or defined?
how is expertise important in problem-solving?
- lab tasks often knowledge-lean (abstracted away from real-world knowledge)
- expertise important for solving real-world problems that are knowledge-rich
- expertise definition- high level of knowledge and performance in a given domain acquired through a long period of systematic study/practice
does expertise aid fast or slow problem-solving? use chess examples
- BOTH
- fast: experts eye movements fixate to relevant/critical pieces quicker in first few seconds (Charness et al. 2001)
- experts still good at blitz chess- high correlation between blitz and normal (Burns 2004)
- slow: as time to make move decreases, skill differences less predictive of outcome- longer means expertise has mor eeffect (Van Harreveld 2007)
- longer time to make move leads to better performance (Moxley et al. 2012)
how does expertise look in medical decisions?
- breast biopsies: reduction in number of fixations, fewer fixations on non-diagnostic regions (Krupinski et al. 2013)
- mammograms of possible breast cancer: less than 1 sec to fixate on cancer for experts, correlation between speed of fixation on cancer and overall detection performance (Kundel et al. 2007)
when does experience become bad?
- functional fixedness- the inflexible focus on the usual function of an object- can’t see novel use of object to solve problem
- mental set- tend to use familiar strategy that was successful in the past, even when it’s not appropriate (Bilalic et al. 2008- chess experts don’t always find quickest route to victory, often find longer solution based on familiar strategy)