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Problem Solving

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Is the king's golden crown pure? K hler's Chimps ... that if a monster is holding two globes, only the larger of the two may be transferred ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Problem Solving


1
Problem Solving
  • Kimberley Clow
  • kclow2_at_uwo.ca
  • http//instruct.uwo.ca/psychology/130

2
Outline
  • Learning vs. Thinking
  • Stages in Creative Thinking
  • Preparation
  • Incubation
  • Illumination
  • Verification
  • Hindrances to Problem Solving
  • Process of Problem Solving
  • Methods of Problem Solving
  • The Brain

3
What is Problem Solving?
  • Problem
  • A situation in which one is trying to reach a
    goal
  • Problem Solving
  • Finding a means for arriving at a goal
  • Arises when a goal is blocked and the solution is
    not obvious

4
Learning vs. Thinking
Learning Curve
Puzzle Box
5
First Trial
Exploring
Sniffing
Grooming
Tendency to perform
Reaching
Scratching
Reaching with paw
Lever-Pressing
Reward
6
Later Trial
Lever-pressing
Exploring
Grooming
Tendency to perform
Reaching
Scratching
Reaching with paw
Sniffing
7
Classic Problem Solving
  • Archimedes
  • Is the kings golden crown pure?
  • Köhlers Chimps
  • How do I get at the banana that is outside my
    cage and beyond my reach?

8
Insight
9
Stages of Creative Thinking
  • Preparation
  • Incubation
  • Illumination
  • Verification
  • Formulating problem making initial attempts to
    solve it
  • Leaving the problem while considering other
    things
  • Achieving insight to the problem
  • Testing and/or carrying out the solution

10
Preparation
  • Different types of problems need different skills
    and approaches
  • Problems in Inducing Structure
  • Analogy Problems
  • Problems in Transformation
  • Cheap Necklace
  • Problems in Arrangement
  • Anagrams

11
Problems in Inducing Structure
  • Suppose you are a doctor faced with a patient who
    has an inoperable stomach tumour. You have at
    your disposal rays that can destroy human tissue
    when directed with sufficient intensity.
  • How can you use these rays to destroy the tumour
    without destroying the surrounding healthy
    tissue?

12
Analogy
  • A general wishes to capture an enemy fortress.
    Radiating outward from the fortress are many
    roads, each mined in such a way that the passing
    of any large force will cause an explosion. This
    precludes a full-scale direct attack
  • How can the general attack the fortress?

13
Using Analogies
14
Problems in Transformation
  • Cheap Necklace Problem
  • Make a necklace out of 4 chains. It costs 2 cents
    to open a link and 3 cents to close a link. Make
    the necklace without spending more than 15 cents.

Given
Goal
15
Evidence for Incubation
16
Problems in Arrangement
Unscramble xbo
  • Heuristic
  • If 2 consonants and a vowel, vowel probably in
    the middle
  • Few words start with x, so put b first
  • box
  • Algorithm
  • Generate all possible letter combinations and
    find which one(s) is(are) real words
  • xbo
  • xob
  • oxb
  • obx
  • bxo
  • box

17
Try Some
  • Set One
  • verba
  • luppi
  • bagler
  • thrize
  • Set Two
  • prega
  • rogena
  • pleap
  • viole
  • Set Three
  • broin
  • arancy
  • chifn
  • relbawr

18
Evidence for Illumination
  • Draw through all 9 dots with 4 straight lines,
    without lifting your pencil.

19
Individual Differences
  • Remote Associations Test (RAT)
  • What single word is an associate of these three?
  •  Results
  • Correlation between RAT performance and the
    generation of associates
  • RAT improves following training in the generation
    of word associations
  • RAT is a better predictor of implicit learning
    than IQ
  • IQ is a better predictor of intentional learning
  • High and low RAT scorers deploy their attention
    in different ways

20
Verification
Water Jug Problem
21
  • Support the candle on the wall so that it doesnt
    drip on the table below

22
Hindrances to Problem Solving
  • Persistence of Set
  • Old strategies continue to be used -- even if
    they are less efficient -- if we fail to perceive
    that the situation has changed
  • Functional Fixedness
  • A tendency to use objects in their customary way
  • Negative Set
  • A tendency to solve problems in one particular
    way, even when a different approach might be more
    productive
  • Why are these numbers arranged in this order?
  • 8, 5, 4, 9, 1, 7, 6, 3, 2, 0

23
Looking at the Process
  • Sequence of problem solving
  • Identify the problem
  • Represent the problem
  • Plan the solution
  • Execute the plan
  • Evaluate the plan
  • Evaluate the solution
  • Characteristics of Problem Solving
  • Goal Directedness
  • Sequence of Steps
  • Cognitive Operations
  • Subgoal Decomposition

24
Definitions
  • Problem Space
  • Includes the initial, intermediate and goal
    states of the problem
  • Also includes the problem solvers knowledge at
    each of these steps
  • Operators
  • The set of legal moves that can be performed
    during problem solving
  • Goal
  • Ultimate solution to the problem

25
Methods of Problem Solving
  • Brute Force Search
  • explore entire problem space
  • Hill Climbing
  • always move toward a better state
  • Work Backward
  • start with goal and work back to start
  • Means-Ends Analysis
  • combination of hill climbing and working backward

26
The Tower of Hanoi
27
The Problem Space
28
Brute Force Search
  • Go through all possible states until solution is
    found
  • Guaranteed to work (eventually)
  • Impractical with large problem spaces
  • Example
  • A 4-letter word meaning not smart
  • 456,976 possible states!

29
Hill Climbing
30
Extreme Hill Climbing
  • Dog cannot stop hill climbing toward bone
  • needs to back up
  • by going away from the goal for a bit, it will
    eventually solve the problem
  • This is a problem for people too

31
Get the Orcs and Hobbits to the other side of the
river BUT Cant have more Orcs than Hobbits
anywhere Boat will only take 2 passengers at a
time Someone must steer the boat
Destination
Initial state
Boat
32
Means-End Analysis
  • Five Steps
  • Set up a goal or subgoal
  • Look at the difference between the current state
    and the goal/subgoal state
  • Look for an operator that will reduce or
    eliminate the difference
  • Apply the operator
  • Apply steps 2 to 4 repeatedly until all goals
    have been achieved

33
Improving Your Problem Solving
  • Increase Domain Knowledge
  • Automate Components
  • Have a systematic Plan
  • Draw Inferences
  • Develop Subgoals
  • Work Backwards
  • Search for Contradictions and Relations Among
    Problems
  • Use Different Problem Representations
  • Practice!

34
Back to the Brain
  • Identified brain regions associated with the
    mapping process in analogical reasoning
  • Medial Frontal Cortex
  • Left Prefrontal Cortex
  • Left Inferior Parietal Cortex
  • Solving insight problems involves the right
    hemisphere

35
For the Logic Lover
  • Three 5-handed monsters were holding three
    crystal globes.
  • Because of the quantum-mechanical peculiarities
    of their neighbourhood, both monsters and globes
    come in exactly three sizes
  • small, medium, and large.
  • The medium-sized monster was holding the small
    globe the small monster was holding the large
    globe and the large monster was holding the
    medium-sized globe.

36
  • Because this situation offended their keenly
    developed sense of symmetry, they proceeded to
    transfer globes from one monster to another so
    that each monster would have a globe
    proportionate to his own size.
  • Monster etiquette complicated the solution of the
    problem because it requires
  • that only one globe may be transferred at a time
  • that if a monster is holding two globes, only the
    larger of the two may be transferred
  • that a globe may not be transferred to a monster
    who is holding a larger globe.
  • By what sequence of transfers could the monsters
    have solved this problem?

37
Symbol Problem
  • Solve the following problem
  • Mary is ten years younger than twice Susans age.
  • Five years from now, Mary will be eight years
    older than Susans age at that time.
  • How old are Mary and Susan?

38
List Person
  • We know that
  • 1. The person with asthma is in Room 101.
  • 2. Ms. Jones has heart disease.
  • 3. Ms Green is in Room 105.
  • 4. Ms. Smith has tuberculosis.
  • 5. The woman with mononucleosis is in Room 104.
  • 6. Ms. Thomas is in Room 101.
  • 7. Ms. Smith is in Room 102.
  • 8. One of the patients, other than Ms. Anderson,
    has gall bladder disease.
  • What disease does Ms. Anderson have, and in what
    room is she?
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