The Structure of Ill-Structured (and Well-Structured) Problems Revisited

被引:38
|
作者
Reed, Stephen K. [1 ,2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] San Diego State Univ, Psychol, San Diego, CA 92182 USA
[2] San Diego State Univ, CRMSE, San Diego, CA 92182 USA
[3] Univ Calif San Diego, Dept Psychol, La Jolla, CA 92093 USA
关键词
Problem solving; Representation; Search; Analogy; Schema; PROCESS MODEL; INSIGHT; ANALOGY; ABSTRACTION; PERSPECTIVE; PERFORMANCE; INCUBATION; GENERATION; KNOWLEDGE; SYSTEMS;
D O I
10.1007/s10648-015-9343-1
中图分类号
G44 [教育心理学];
学科分类号
0402 ; 040202 ;
摘要
In his 1973 article The Structure of ill structured problems, Herbert Simon proposed that solving ill-structured problems could be modeled within the same information-processing framework developed for solving well-structured problems. This claim is reexamined within the context of over 40 years of subsequent research and theoretical development. Well-structured (puzzle) problems can be represented by a problem space consisting of well-defined initial and goal states that are connected by legal moves. In contrast, the initial, goal, and intermediate states of ill-structured (design) problems are incompletely specified. This article analyzes the similarities and differences among puzzles, insight puzzles, classroom problems, and design problems within Gick's (Educational Psychologist, 21, 99-120, 1986) theoretical framework consisting of representation construction, schema activation, and heuristic search. The analysis supports Simon's (Artificial Intelligence, 4, 181-201, 1973) claim that information-processing principles apply to all problems but apply differently as problems become more ill structured.
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页码:691 / 716
页数:26
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