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Thinking by Doing? Epistemic Actions in the Tower of Hanoi

This article explores the concept of epistemic actions in the Tower of Hanoi (ToH) problem. Epistemic actions (Kirsh & Maglio, 1994) are actions that do not traverse the problem space toward the goal but facilitate subsequent problem solving by changing the actor's cognitive state. We report an experiment in which people repeatedly solve ToH tasks. An instructional manipulation asked participants to minimize moves either trial by trial or only on the last three of six trials. This manipulation did not have the predicted effect on the trial-by-trial move counts. A second, device manipulation provided some participants with an "exploratory mode" in which move sequences could be tried then undone without affecting the criterion move count. Participants effectively used this mode to reduce moves on each trial, but there was no clear evidence that they used it to learn about the problem across trials. We conclude that there is strong evidence for one sub-type of epistemic action (acting-to-plan) but no evidence for a second sub-type (acting-to-learn).

Neth, H., & Payne, S.J. (2002). Thinking by Doing? Epistemic Actions in the Tower of Hanoi. In W.D. Gray and C.D. Schunn (Eds.), Proceedings of the Twenty-Fourth Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society (pp. 691-696). Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum. [Download article in pdf format, 141KB.]

Please note: Our work on epistemic actions has been inspired by the work of David Kirsh David Kirsh's pages >> and Paul Maglio Paul Maglio's pages >>. For additional information and some fascinating ideas, please refer to their publications.

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hanz@neth.de; 07/2002