CS2984: Introduction to Problem Solving
Homework Assignment 13
Due at 11:00pm on Tuesday, April 22
40 Points
See the General Guidelines for homework assignments. Don't forget to include the pledge statement!
This assignment must be done with a partner. The final submission should contain the name of both partners. Only one partner should actually make the submission to Web-CAT. Your solutions should clearly explain, for each question, the contribution for each partner. Partners should work together on the problems, not independently.
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Problem Situation: Sara is a freshman away at college preparing
for her first final exams. She is homesick, stressed out, and would
like to go home for the weekend to visit her parents, but her car is
not working.
First attempt at Present State/Desired State Analysis:
Present State: Sara's car is not working.
Desired State: At home with her parentsThese states do not match and this mismatch confuses the problem. Which problem should she be attacking? The malfunctioning car? The visit?
(a) Revise the problem statements for a Present State/Desired State analysis to make them match.
(b) Based on your modified desired state definition from (a), create a Dunker Diagram with two trees, one whose root is labeled "Achieve Desired State" and one labeled "OK Not to Achieve Desired State", and fill out the trees with several alternative solutions for each.
- You have decided you can spend up to $25,000 to buy a car. Prepare a K.T. Decision Analysis table to decide which car to buy. Use your local newspaper to collect information about the various models, pricing, and options and then decide on your musts (e.g., air bag) and your wants (e.g., fancy stereo). Provide scorings for four different models. Then, explain (in a couple of sentences) how your decision would be affected if you could spend only $10,000. Finally, explain (in a couple of sentences) how your decision would be affected if you could spend $35,000.