Title: Thinking and problem solving
1Thinking and problem solving
- Are you smart?
- Would you like to be?
- What does smart mean anyway?
2Admin
- How is your reading going?
- Insights?
- Comments on The Code Book
3What does smart mean?
- Witty, clever in conversation, quick with a
come-back - Solve math problems
- Taking a tough major at college (IT!)
- High IQ
- Excellent snowboarder
4Multiple intelligences
- Dr Howard Gardner proposes
- Linguistic intelligence ("word smart")
- Logical-mathematical intelligence
("number/reasoning smart") - Spatial intelligence ("picture smart")
- Bodily-Kinesthetic intelligence ("body smart")
- Musical intelligence ("music smart")
- Interpersonal intelligence ("people smart")
- Intrapersonal intelligence ("self smart")
- Naturalist intelligence ("nature smart")
5IQ can be trained
- Each of the types of IQ can be trained
- We will focus on thinking styles for
problem-solving
6Problem Solving Phases
- Expansion then Contraction
7Learning to think for problem solving
- Thinking and problem solving skills can be
learned and improved - Understanding thinking approaches will prepare
you. - Insight
- Logical Thinking
- Abstraction
- Sequential
- Strategic
8Insight Aha
- The solution is obviously correct, it requires no
justification - Before the solution is found there is no obvious
way to get you to it - EG Two Indians are walking through the desert
carrying bows and arrows. The little Indian is
the big Indians son but the big Indian is not
the little Indians father. Who is the big Indian?
9EG Analysis
- Superficial resemblance to logic
- But different
- Suggest solutions "his uncle," "his stepfather,"
"his grandfather," - Test them against the given information
- Exotic suggestions tend to arise
- "his spirit guide" , "his brother who married his
mother," etc. - Lateral thinking?
10Solution
- Words mislead
- Clichés stereotypes channel thinking
- "Indians," "bows and arrows," father/son
- Conditioned by popular media to think of Indians
with bows and arrows as warriors, big strong men.
- Once the correct answer is perceived then all
this becomes meaningless. - The correct answer is, of course, his mother.
11Insight thinking
- Insight takes us in a single jump from conclusion
to solution - See things in a different way
- May be wrong check with logic
- Humor often associated with insight creativity
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14There are 11 human faces in this picture. Can you
find them all? Most people can find 4 or 5,
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16Humor in Insight Thinking
- EG 1.
- Time flies."
- "You cant, They move too fast"
- EG 2
- "If the auto industry had advanced as computers
have then a Cadillac would cost 10 and give 1000
miles to the gallon today." - "That Cadillac would be two inches long and would
crash and delete its contents every year
especially if it had Windows" - Punch line changes your perspective (insight)
17Characteristics of Insight Thinking
- Lateral thinking (thinking sideways)
- Edward de Bono
- Explore impossible ideas
- Reserve judgment (not yes, not No Po)
- Humor and paradoxes
- Generate lots of solutions (group brainstorm)
- Test results with logical thinking
- Mathematical proofs
- Pull the ladder up behind you
18Logical thinking
- Logical thinking is proceeding from sound
premises in a strictly controlled way to a
definite conclusion. - Example A man is looking at a picture and he
says "Brothers and sisters have I none. This
mans father is my fathers son. Who am I"
19Logical ? Deconstruction
- Relationship can be deduced by strictly logical
rules. - Problem is reduced to sub-problems
- EG If no siblings, "my fathers son" is me.
Substitute "me" for "my fathers son" and - Statement becomes, "This mans father is me. Who
am I". - If necessary re-arrange the statement to "I am
this man's father - problem is solved.
20More logic problems
- Elementary school "story problems".
- A train is traveling east from LA at 97 mph
- remove superfluous verbiage
- reduced to a strictly logical problem
- unique solution (in elementary school)
- Mathematics is a sub-branch of logic.
- this category includes all story problems,
Sudoku, Kenken etc.
21Logic characteristics
- Set of data (premises)
- Strictly logical deductions
- Build from premises to conclusion.
- Often has form of if-then-else evaluations.
- Used to solve problems which have direct, unique
(sets of) solutions - Also used to check the validity of a hunch or
Lateral thinking
22Abstraction
- To extract from one situation a general
understanding that can be applied to other
situations
23Math models
- What does this represent? What does it imply?
What can you use it for? - y ax b
- How about these?
- x A sin (T) a
24Prototypes
- In what way is a prototype an abstraction?
- Paper prototypes
- Wizard of Oz prototypes
- Façade prototypes
- etc.
25Abstraction within IT
26Sequential Thinking
- Very useful in debugging computers (SW HW)
- Successively modify a solution
- History of Technology
- EG Twenty Questions
- EG Eight balls or twelve balls
- EG de Bono Five day course in thinking
2712 8 ball problems
- 12 balls There are twelve balls. Think of them
as similar to billiard or snooker balls. Eleven
of the balls are identical is size and weight and
appearance the twelfth is the same size and
appearance but a different weight. It is either
lighter or heavier. - Using a set of scales (old fashioned weight
balances with two pans) a maximum of three times,
- find the different ball and
- state whether it is lighter or heavier.
- You may only compare the weight of balls to
balls, no other weights may be used.
288 Ball Problem
- A slightly easier variant the eight balls
problem There are 8 balls. One of them is
heavier. Using a set of scales a maximum of twice
find the odd ball.
29- E.G. de Bono proposed series of problems to
demonstrate sequential thinking. Using a set of
six rectangular blocks solve the following
problems in the order given. For these problems a
touching box is one that share a common boundary
for some distance. The corner of one box
intersecting another at one point is not
"touching.
30Arrange the boxes such that each box
- is touching 2 and only 2 other boxes.
- is touching 3 and only 3 other boxes.
- is touching 4 and only 4 other boxes.
- is touching 5 and only 5 other boxes.
- one box is touching only 1 other box, one box is
touching only 2 other boxes, one box is touching
only 3 other boxes, one box is touching only 4
other boxes, one box is touching only 5 other
boxes.
31Sequential boxes contd
- Working through these six problems and
contemplating the thinking processes used helps
you develop creative and sequential thinking
techniques that can be applied to later problems.
- In particular the last problem can be
sequentially solved in stages but the stages are
not the obvious order that you may expect. - De Bono's book, The Five-Day Course in Thinking,
gives other exercises and problems
32Sequential Characteristics
- Combinations of insight and logical thinking
- Step by step progression
- See strategic thinking
33Strategic Thinking
- Expert chess players do not predict the game many
moves ahead. - They strive for powerful positions on the board
- Strategic thinking Pursue intermediate goals
with a clear long-term goal in mind - Do not to plan every detail
- EG Project management.
34Strategy
The objective is to start at state 1 and end at
state 2. There are many alternative paths
possible. Some intermediate states are absolutely
necessary, such as state 3, while others can be
avoided. Some states such as state 4, are
dead-ends although this might not be apparent
until the dead-end is reached.
35Elegant Solutions?
- Optimal in one or more ways
- Succinct
- Covers every case with one algorithm
- Fastest solution
- EG
- 1e-ip0
- The most beautiful equation in the world
- Richard Feynmann as a teenager
- Contains 1, 0, , -, fundamental constants e, i, p
36Problems
- See class notes
- Do problems 1, 3, 4b in class
- State what style(s) of thinking is (are) involved
for each problem. - Finish for HW