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Article de revue: ID no. (ISBN etc.):  09541446 Clé de citation BibTeX:  Marmeche2001
Marmèche, E., & Didierjean, A. (2001). Is generalisation conservative? a study with novices in chess. European Journal of Cognitive Psychology, 13(4), p. p475–491.
Ajoutée par: Lynda Taabane 2007-12-12 11:37:00    Dernièrement modifiée par: Lynda Taabane 2008-01-16 22:18:27
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Catégories: Analogie, Apprentissage mathématiques, COEFF, Effets de contenu, Full text, Résolution de problèmes, Transfert analogique
Descripteurs: COGNITIVE psychology, problem solving
Auteurs: Didierjean, Marmèche
Collection: European Journal of Cognitive Psychology

Nombre de vues:  301
Popularité:  27.29%

 
Résumé
The present paper argues that generalisation is conservative. Our goal was to experimentally study the links between knowledge generalisation and the storage of contextual elements. The knowledge domain, very simple chess configurations, allowed subjects, novices in chess, to acquire micro-expertise based on the analysis of a single source problem. In the first experimental phase, subjects had to analyse a source problem. We induced two modes of source-problem encoding: In the first group, subjects were given explanations focused on the sequence of elementary solving steps; in the other group they were given the general principle relevant to the category of problems in question. Subjects had then to solve different tests (solving isomorphic problems, recall tests, similarity tests) designed to answer two questions: The first question was to test whether the experimental manipulation in the two groups had in fact generated knowledge that varied in abstractness; the second question was
Ajoutée par: Lynda Taabane    Dernièrement modifiée par: Lynda Taabane

 
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Ajoutée par: Lynda Taabane
 

 
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