Understanding the Problem
Problem-solving
strategies
The Analogy
Approach
Creativity
Expertise & Mental set
100

What are two key skills needed to accurately represent a problem?

Identifying the goal and understanding the given information.

100

This heuristic involves breaking a problem into smaller, manageable goals.

 Means-ends heuristic.

100

What is the term for applying a known solution to a new, similar problem?

Analogical transfer

100

What type of motivation best supports creative thinking?

 Intrinsic motivation.

100

Experts are more likely than novices to focus on what type of problem features?

Structural features

200

What’s a common mistake people make when interpreting a problem?

 Focusing too much on surface features instead of the deeper structure.

200

This strategy involves choosing the option that gets you closest to your goal at each step.

Hill-climbing heuristic

200

In analogy problem-solving, what are the "source" and "target" problems?

The source problem is the one you already solved; the target problem is the new one you're trying to solve.

200

What is the term for a sudden realization that leads to a solution?

Insight.

200

What is mental set?

The tendency to keep using the same problem-solving strategy, even when a new one might work better.

300

What’s the term for how the way a problem is presented influences how we solve it?

Problem representation.

300

Name the heuristic where you temporarily move away from the goal to reach a solution.

Means-ends analysis (or backward search).

300

What’s one major obstacle to using analogies effectively?

Focusing too much on surface features instead of underlying structure.

300

Name one factor that can hinder creativity.

Pressure from external rewards, evaluation, or strict rules.

300

What is functional fixedness?

Struggling to see a new use for a familiar object.

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