Diagrammatic Reasoning in Problem Solving

From Tetherless World Wiki

Jump to: navigation, search

Citation: Yumi Iwasaki and Shirley G. Tessler and Kincho H. Law. (1991) Diagrammatic Reasoning in Problem Solving. In KSL-92-12, February,1991.

Publication techreport ( Edit )
type Technical Report
bibtype techreport
Bibtex basics
author Yumi Iwasaki and Shirley G. Tessler and Kincho H. Law
title Diagrammatic Reasoning in Problem Solving
number KSL-92-12
institution Knowledge Systems, AI Laboratory
year 1991
month February
Bibtex more
Access Paper
abstract Diagrammatic reasoning is a type of reasoning process in which the primary means of inference is the direct manipulation and inspection of a diagram.This type of reasoning, which we also call visual reasoning or pictorial reasoning, is an integral part of human problem solving behavior, especially for problems involving spatial relationships among physical or abstract objects. Our research goal is to investigate the role that visual reasoning plays in the overall problem solving process. In this report we present our ideas about the human visual reasoning process, and describe our proposal to emulate this capability with a computer program.Our approach is to develop a computer program with both symbolic and diagrammatic reasoning components that will be able to reason qualitatively using pictures in the same way that people do. Our conjecture is that the familiarity of the mixed problem solving approach taken by the program will be more understandable to a user and more useful as an aid to teaching visualization skills than a purely symbolic reasoning program would be.Computational efficiency may also be enhanced because the program would be able to focus more effectively on the critical features of the problem.Our program will solve a class of structural analysis problems within the domain of civil engineering, in part because their solution process requires domain-specific knowledge as well as visualization skills. We postulate that domain knowledge may influence the way visual reaoning is performed. Since we have previously implemented the same set of problems in a traditional symbolic approach, we will have the opportunity to analyze the relationship between symbolic and diagrammatic problem solving and to examine the relative advantages of each.

KSL Technical Report ID: KSL-92-12
Facts about Diagrammatic Reasoning in Problem SolvingRDF feed
Abstract Diagrammatic reasoning is a type of reason Diagrammatic reasoning is a type of reasoning process in which the primary means of inference is the direct manipulation and inspection of a diagram.This type of reasoning, which we also call visual reasoning or pictorial reasoning, is an integral part of human problem solving behavior, especially for problems involving spatial relationships among physical or abstract objects. Our research goal is to investigate the role that visual reasoning plays in the overall problem solving process. In this report we present our ideas about the human visual reasoning process, and describe our proposal to emulate this capability with a computer program.Our approach is to develop a computer program with both symbolic and diagrammatic reasoning components that will be able to reason qualitatively using pictures in the same way that people do. Our conjecture is that the familiarity of the mixed problem solving approach taken by the program will be more understandable to a user and more useful as an aid to teaching visualization skills than a purely symbolic reasoning program would be.Computational efficiency may also be enhanced because the program would be able to focus more effectively on the critical features of the problem.Our program will solve a class of structural analysis problems within the domain of civil engineering, in part because their solution process requires domain-specific knowledge as well as visualization skills. We postulate that domain knowledge may influence the way visual reaoning is performed. Since we have previously implemented the same set of problems in a traditional symbolic approach, we will have the opportunity to analyze the relationship between symbolic and diagrammatic problem solving and to examine the relative advantages of each. o examine the relative advantages of each.
Author Yumi Iwasaki and Shirley G. Tessler and Kincho H. Law  +
Bibtype techreport  +
Has author Yumi Iwasaki and Shirley G. Tessler and Kincho H. Law  +
Has identifier KSL-92-12  +
Has publishing details February,1991  +
Has title Diagrammatic Reasoning in Problem Solving  +
Has where published KSL-92-12  +
Has year 1991  +
Institution Knowledge Systems, AI Laboratory  +
Ksl tr id KSL-92-12  +
Month February  +
Number KSL-92-12  +
Process note NO  +
Title Diagrammatic Reasoning in Problem Solving  +
Year 1991  +
Personal tools