Newell-Simon approach to problem solving
Based in information processing theory of cognitive psychology.
Problem solving can be broken down into different states such as the:
- Initial state
- Goal state
- Intermediate states
The states can change through operators and strategy setting subgoals through means-end analysis.
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Psychology
Social Science
Empirical Science
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Ideation
Insight
Fixation
Mental set
Newell-Simon approach to problem solving
Presentation of problems and ease to solve
Analogical problem solving
Group brainstorming
Prediction
Inflexibility
A seasoned chef is famous for a complex sauce made using a traditional whisking technique. The restaurant buys a new high-speed immersion blender designed to create smoother sauces in a fraction of the time. Despite the new tool's potential, the chef continues to apply their old, familiar whisking motions while using the new blender, resulting in a poorly mixed sauce. They fail to adopt a different, simpler approach better suited for the new equipment. Which cognitive obstacle is the chef most clearly demonstrating?
Newell-Simon approach to problem solving
Analogical problem solving