Understanding the Problem
Problem-Solving Strategies
Creativity and Cognitive Blocks
100

This term describes the starting point before any steps are taken in solving a problem.

What is the initial state?

100

This approach explores every possibility and always finds a solution, but can be slow and inefficient.

What is an algorithm?

100

These are the two essential characteristics of a creative solution.

What are novelty and usefulness?

200

These are the three necessary components to fully define a problem.

What are the initial state, goal state, and obstacles?

200

This shortcut method relies on general rules and often gives quick solutions without guarantees.

What is a heuristic?

200

This type of internal drive supports creativity because tasks are done out of enjoyment, not rewards.

What is intrinsic motivation?

300

This cognitive concept explains how environmental context helps us understand and solve problems.

What is situated cognition?

300

This strategy breaks problems into subproblems and reduces the gap between where you are and where you want to be.

What is the means-ends heuristic?

300

This cognitive bias causes people to see objects only in terms of their typical use.

What is functional fixedness?

400

This method of organizing information helps with tracking multiple categories during problem-solving.

What is a matrix?

400

This kind of problem is typically solved in a sudden flash of understanding.

What is an insight problem?

400

This mental habit causes people to keep using an old strategy, even when a better one is available.

What is a mental set?

500

This is what you create mentally to truly understand and solve a problem.

What is a well-organized mental representation?

500

This approach involves always choosing the step that seems to lead most directly to the goal.

What is the hill-climbing heuristic?

500

This performance-lowering effect occurs when someone feels pressure from a negative stereotype.

What is stereotype threat?

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