--- title: C- Breaking ideas down into component parts facilitates creative reinterpretation enableTOC: flase tags: - claim --- Authored By:: [[P- Joel Chan]] Breaking ideas down into their component parts allows us to creatively reinterpret ideas for new purposes, such as creating a new understanding of a problem, or creatively reuse ideas in new contexts. In insight problem solving, there is the idea of chunk decomposition (see, e.g., [[@knoblichConstraintRelaxationChunk1999]]). The basic idea goes something like this: - People create chunks to organize experience. Knoblich characterizes Chunks as "patterns that capture recurring constellations of features or components" (p. 1535) - Encountering a novel problem activates some chunks from past experiences. Not all of them will be helpful; and some will be actively unhelpful. And some will need to be decomposed (compression reversed??) - Evidence for this comes from experiments where chunk decomposition was impaired, leading to worse performance on solving the problem. [[@mccaffreyInnovationReliesObscure2012]] has extended this idea to detail how being able to "break down" an idea or object and see its component obscure features in a function-free manner is a powerful strategy for breaking fixation by creatively recombining objects to come up with novel solutions.