Abstract
The effects of previously acquired information on a later problem solving task were explored. Prior research has shown that the acquisition of potentially relevant information is not effective for cuing solutions in a later problem solving task unless subjects are informed of the connection. The present research extends these results and demonstrates that the problem solving failure is not due to subjects’ rejecting the potentially relevant information following retrieval. Rather, the apparent failure to appropriately use previous information is a result of uninformed subjects’ inability to spontaneously access such information. Furthermore, the observed access failure is not reversible by simply informing the subjects of the task connection prior to a second trial. Finally, the results indicate that problem solving failure on a later informed trial is a problem-specific phenomenon that does not generalize to new problems. The implications for contemporary episodic memory paradigms and the role of access in learning theory are discussed.
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This research was supported in part by the National Institute of Education (Grant NIE-G-79-017).
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Perfetto, G.A., Bransford, J.D. & Franks, J.J. Constraints on access in a problem solving context. Memory & Cognition 11, 24–31 (1983). https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03197658
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03197658