Prior literature has relied on varied methodology to infer conclusions about adult problem solvers; possibly leading to erroneous assumptions about everyday problem-solving performance in adulthood. The present study examined everyday problem-solving performance of 133 younger, middle-aged, and older adults. The goal of the study was to investigate whether different scoring procedures (number vs. strategy type) or participant instructions (self target vs. others target) affected how adults performed on two types of open-ended problem-solving vignettes (home vs. friend problem domains). Differential age patterns were found when comparing the number and types of strategies reported. When assessing total number of solutions generated, middle-a...
The acquisition of cognitive skills often depends on 1 of (or a combination of) 2 processes, the exe...
The current study examined how age and sex of participants, gender stereotype roles for the protagon...
Sixty young (M- 20.6), middle-aged (M = 52.4), and elderly (M = 72.6) men and women solved problems ...
Individual difference characteristics (i.e., age, gender, self-efficacy beliefs, exposure to problem...
Within the everyday problem-solving literature, a small number of studies have examined effectivenes...
Researchers examining everyday problem solving in adulthood have focused mainly on age differences i...
This study tested the hypothesis that older adults retain high levels of everyday problem solving pe...
The purpose of the present research was to examine the contribution of age and individual difference...
ABSTRACT—Despite cognitive declines that occur with aging, older adults solve emotionally salient an...
Qualitative differences in problem-solving style for situations varying in emotional salience were e...
The purposes of this study were to: (a) determine whether older adults would use logic-based strateg...
The purpose of the present study was to examine cognitive abilities and problem solving processes of...
A longitudinal study of an initial sample of 300 men whose ages ranged from 24 to 87 years was carri...
In problems resembling the Twenty Questions game, older and younger adults were asked to discover th...
Several hypotheses regarding the ability of elderly subjects to learn a fluid intelligence skill, pr...
The acquisition of cognitive skills often depends on 1 of (or a combination of) 2 processes, the exe...
The current study examined how age and sex of participants, gender stereotype roles for the protagon...
Sixty young (M- 20.6), middle-aged (M = 52.4), and elderly (M = 72.6) men and women solved problems ...
Individual difference characteristics (i.e., age, gender, self-efficacy beliefs, exposure to problem...
Within the everyday problem-solving literature, a small number of studies have examined effectivenes...
Researchers examining everyday problem solving in adulthood have focused mainly on age differences i...
This study tested the hypothesis that older adults retain high levels of everyday problem solving pe...
The purpose of the present research was to examine the contribution of age and individual difference...
ABSTRACT—Despite cognitive declines that occur with aging, older adults solve emotionally salient an...
Qualitative differences in problem-solving style for situations varying in emotional salience were e...
The purposes of this study were to: (a) determine whether older adults would use logic-based strateg...
The purpose of the present study was to examine cognitive abilities and problem solving processes of...
A longitudinal study of an initial sample of 300 men whose ages ranged from 24 to 87 years was carri...
In problems resembling the Twenty Questions game, older and younger adults were asked to discover th...
Several hypotheses regarding the ability of elderly subjects to learn a fluid intelligence skill, pr...
The acquisition of cognitive skills often depends on 1 of (or a combination of) 2 processes, the exe...
The current study examined how age and sex of participants, gender stereotype roles for the protagon...
Sixty young (M- 20.6), middle-aged (M = 52.4), and elderly (M = 72.6) men and women solved problems ...