Abstract

Intuition and insight are intriguing phenomena of non-analytical mental functioning: whereas intuition denotes ideas that have been reached by sensing the solution without any explicit representation of it, insight has been understood as the sudden and unexpected apprehension of the solution by recombining the single elements of a problem. By face validity, the two processes appear similar; according to a lay perspective, it is assumed that intuition precedes insight. Yet, predominant scientific conceptualizations of intuition and insight consider the two processes to differ with regard to their (dis-)continuous unfolding. That is, intuition has been understood as an experience-based and gradual process, whereas insight is regarded as a genuinely discontinuous phenomenon. Unfortunately, both processes have been investigated differently and without much reference to each other. In this contribution, we therefore set out to fill this lacuna by examining the conceptualizations of the assumed underlying cognitive processes of both phenomena, and by also referring to the research traditions and paradigms of the respective field. Based on early work put forward by Bowers et al. (1990, 1995), we referred to semantic coherence tasks consisting of convergent word triads (i.e., the solution has the same meaning to all three clue words) and/or divergent word triads (i.e., the solution means something different with respect to each clue word) as an excellent kind of paradigm that may be used in the future to disentangle intuition and insight experimentally. By scrutinizing the underlying mechanisms of intuition and insight, with this theoretical contribution, we hope to launch lacking but needed experimental studies and to initiate scientific cooperation between the research fields of intuition and insight that are currently still separated from each other.

Highlights

  • There are situations, in which decision makers arrive at an idea or a decision not by analytically inferring the solution but by either sensing the correct solution without being able to give reasons for it, or by realizing the solution all of a sudden without being able to report on the solution process

  • Scientists have been highly fascinated by the topic since its early description by the Gestalt psychologists. This great interest culminated in the seminal book “The nature of insight,” which mainly deals with the Gestalt psychologist’s view on insight problem solving (Sternberg and Davidson, 1995)

  • Using a similar task, which consists of up to 15 semantically target-related clue words, it could be observed that participants continuously approached the explicit representation of environmental patterns/meaning (Bowers et al, 1990; Reber et al, 2007), which could be recently demonstrated on a neuronal level when using the semantic coherence task (Zander et al, 2015)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

There are situations, in which decision makers arrive at an idea or a decision not by analytically inferring the solution but by either sensing the correct solution without being able to give reasons for it, or by realizing the solution all of a sudden without being able to report on the solution process. The former phenomenon has been called intuition, the latter insight. Both have fascinated the public as well as the scientific audience

Continuity and Discontinuity in Problem Solving
Theoretical Characterization of Intuition
DIFFERENT RESEARCH TRADITIONS OF INTUITION AND INSIGHT
Interim Summary I
DIFFERENCES IN THE COGNITIVE PROCESSES ASSUMED TO UNDERLIE INTUITION AND INSIGHT
Interim Summary II
BRIDGING THE GAP BETWEEN THE UNDERLYING PROCESSES OF INSIGHT AND INTUITION
Interim Summary III
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