ABSTRACT

The Cognitive Psychology of Planning assesses recent advances in the scientific study of the cognitive processes involved in formulating, evaluating and selecting a sequence of thoughts and actions to achieve a goal. Approaches discussed range from those which look at planning in terms of problem-solving behaviour to those which look at how we control thoughts and actions within the frameworks of attention, working memory or executive function. Topics covered include: simple to complex tasks, well- and ill-defined problems and the effects of age and focal brain damage on planning. This survey of recent work in the cognitive psychology and cognitive neuropsychology of planning will be an invaluable resource for anyone studying or researching in the fields of thinking and reasoning, memory and attention.

chapter |19 pages

Planning and human problem solving

chapter |3 pages

REFERENCES

part |2 pages

SELECTION AND EFFECTIVENESS OF DIFFERENT PLANNING BEHAVIOURS

chapter |5 pages

SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS

chapter |14 pages

On-line planning and puzzle solving

chapter 4|7 pages

Working memory and planning

chapter |4 pages

CONCLUDING COMMENTS

chapter |3 pages

REFERENCES

part 6|2 pages

Adult ageing and cognitive planning

chapter |10 pages

DEVELOPMENT OF STRATEGIES

chapter |20 pages

Real-world planning situations