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Stein, Barry S.; And Others – 1983
Research indicates that people do not spontaneously transfer prior clues to solve problems, even though the necessary information is available in memory. To investigate the effects of the symmetry between clue statements and problem statements on problem solving performance, subjects were asked to provide plausible explanations for five…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cues, Generalization, Memory
Catrambone, Richard; Holyoak, Keith – 1985
In general, people seem to be poor at noticing analogies, especially when they are required to apply an analogy to a domain that is new. It was suspected that schemas influence the noticing and applying of analogies. Schemas are hypothesized to be abstract propositional structures that emphasize relationships among categories of objects rather…
Descriptors: Analogy, Concept Formation, Cues, Higher Education
Bybee, Jane; Zigler, Edward – American Journal on Mental Retardation, 1992
This study with 56 students (mean age 15 years) with mental retardation and 53 nonretarded students (matched for mental age) found that students with mental retardation were more likely to rely on all kinds of external cues (task-relevant, incidental, or misleading) in problem solving, especially when the preceding task had been difficult.…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Cognitive Processes, Cues, Difficulty Level
Shire, Beatrice; Durkin, Kevin – 1984
Young children's responses to a velocity inference task based on static pictorial stimuli giving cues of proximity and ratio were examined. Subjects (N=65) in preschool through second grade viewed pictures of snails moving horizontally or spiders suspended vertically and were asked to estimate which competitor would reach its destination first.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Development, Cues, Ecology