Nagaoka University of Technology
   
 

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Kitajima, M. (2018)

Kitajima, M. (2018). Nourishing Problem Solving Skills by Performing HCI Tasks -- Relationships between the Methods of Problem Solving (Retrieval, Discovery, or Search) and the Kinds of Acquired Problem Solving Skills. Proceedings of the 13th International Joint Conference on Computer Vision, Imaging and Computer Graphics Theory and Applications (VISIGRAPP 2018), Volume 2: HUCAPP, 132-139.

 

Nourishing Problem Solving Skills by Performing HCI Tasks -- Relationships between the Methods of Problem Solving (Retrieval, Discovery, or Search) and the Kinds of Acquired Problem Solving Skills

There are three methods for deriving a solution for a problem with which a person is facing, which are 1) retrieval of an existing solution from his/her own memory or from available external resources including human resources, digital resources, and so on, 2) clarifying the constraints to meet and discovering a solution that should satisfy them by exploring the problem space, or 3) deriving a solution by applying inference rules successively until the goal state is achieved. This paper describes the distinctive cognitive processes that respective methods should use when deriving a solution. On the assumption that the ultimately needed problem solving skill would be the one which makes a person solve any problem by himself or herself without reliance on any external resources other than himself/herself, i.e., adaptive problem solving, this paper discusses the implications of the respective methods of problem solving to acquiring the required problem solving skill.

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