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Laine, A. D. – Australian Senior Mathematics Journal, 2015
There are many geometrical approaches to the solution of the quadratic equation with real coefficients. In this article it is shown that the monic quadratic equation with complex coefficients can also be solved graphically, by the intersection of two hyperbolas; one hyperbola being derived from the real part of the quadratic equation and one from…
Descriptors: Geometric Concepts, Geometry, Equations (Mathematics), Problem Solving
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MacGregor, James N. – Journal of Problem Solving, 2013
Most models of human performance on the traveling salesperson problem involve clustering of nodes, but few empirical studies have examined effects of clustering in the stimulus array. A recent exception varied degree of clustering and concluded that the more clustered a stimulus array, the easier a TSP is to solve (Dry, Preiss, & Wagemans,…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Task Analysis, Testing, College Students
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MacGregor, James N. – Journal of Problem Solving, 2012
A complete, non-trivial, traveling sales tour problem contains at least one "indentation", where nodes in the interior of the point set are connected between two adjacent nodes on the boundary. Early research reported that human tours exhibited fewer such indentations than expected. A subsequent explanation proposed that this was because…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Mathematical Applications, Graphs, Foreign Countries
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Dry, Matthew J.; Preiss, Kym; Wagemans, Johan – Journal of Problem Solving, 2012
We investigated human performance on the Euclidean Traveling Salesperson Problem (TSP) and Euclidean Minimum Spanning Tree Problem (MST-P) in regards to a factor that has previously received little attention within the literature: the spatial distributions of TSP and MST-P stimuli. First, we describe a method for quantifying the relative degree of…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Mathematical Applications, Graphs, Performance
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Acevedo Nistal, Ana; Van Dooren, Wim; Verschaffel, Lieven – Educational Studies, 2013
Thirty-six secondary school students aged 14-16 were interviewed while they chose between a table, a graph or a formula to solve three linear function problems. The justifications for their choices were classified as (1) task-related if they explicitly mentioned the to-be-solved problem, (2) subject-related if students mentioned their own…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, Problem Solving, Tables (Data), Graphs
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Walwyn, Amy L.; Navarro, Daniel J. – Journal of Problem Solving, 2010
An experiment is reported comparing human performance on two kinds of visually presented traveling salesperson problems (TSPs), those reliant on Euclidean geometry and those reliant on city block geometry. Across multiple array sizes, human performance was near-optimal in both geometries, but was slightly better in the Euclidean format. Even so,…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Mathematical Applications, Graphs, Geometry
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Grishin, Anatole – Australian Senior Mathematics Journal, 2009
Graphing utilities, such as the ubiquitous graphing calculator, are often used in finding the approximate real roots of polynomial equations. In this paper the author offers a simple graphing technique that allows one to find all solutions of a polynomial equation (1) of arbitrary degree; (2) with real or complex coefficients; and (3) possessing…
Descriptors: Graphing Calculators, Equations (Mathematics), Graphs, Teaching Methods
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Obara, Samuel – Australian Senior Mathematics Journal, 2009
This paper presents an investigation by pre-service secondary school teachers in a geometry class of the relationship between the perpendicular distance from the eyeball to the wall (x) and the viewable vertical distance on the wall (y) using a view tube of constant length and diameter. In undertaking the investigation, students used tabular and…
Descriptors: Investigations, Secondary School Teachers, Geometry, Preservice Teacher Education
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Barton, Roy – Physics Education, 1998
Argues that the only reason to ask students to plot graphs manually should be to have them learn the skill of plotting graphs manually. For data-analysis purposes, the use of computer-generated graphs has several advantages and few disadvantages over manual plotting. (Author/WRM)
Descriptors: Data Analysis, Foreign Countries, Graphs, Mathematical Applications