Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Creativity
View through CrossRef
Creativity is perhaps what most differentiates humans from other species. Understanding creativity is particularly important in times of accelerated cultural and environmental change, such as the present, in which novel approaches and perspectives are needed. The study of creativity is an exciting area that brings together many different branches of research: cognitive psychology, social psychology, personality psychology, developmental psychology, organizational psychology, clinical psychology, neuroscience, mathematical models, and computer simulations. The creative process is thought to involve the capacity to shift between divergent and convergent modes of thought in response to task demands. Divergent thought is conventionally characterized as the kind of thinking needed for open-ended tasks, and it is measured by the ability to generate multiple solutions, while convergent thought is commonly characterized as the kind of thinking needed for tasks in which there is only one correct solution. More recently, divergent thought has been conceived of as reflecting on the task from unconventional contexts or perspectives, while convergent thought has been conceived of as reflecting on it from conventional contexts or perspectives. Personality traits correlated with creativity include openness to experience, tolerance of ambiguity, impulsivity, and self-confidence. Evidence that creativity is linked with affective disorders is mixed. Neuroscientific research on creativity using electroencephalography (EEG) or functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) suggests that creativity is associated with a loosening of cognitive control and decreased arousal. It has been shown that the distributed, content-addressable structure of associative memory is conducive to bringing task-relevant items to mind without the need for explicit search. Tangible evidence of human creativity dates back to the earliest stone tools devised over three million years ago, with the Middle-Upper Paleolithic marking the onset of art, science, and religion, and another surge of creativity in the present. Past and current areas of controversy concern the relative contributions of expertise, chance, and intuition, whether the emphasis should be on process versus product, whether creativity is a domain-specific or a domain-general function, the extent to which creativity is correlated with affective disorders, and whether divergent thinking entails the generation of multiple ideas or the honing of a single initially ambiguous mental representation that may manifest as different external outputs. Promising areas for further psychological study of creativity include computational modeling, research on the biological basis of creativity, and studies that track specific creative ideation processes over time.
Title: Creativity
Description:
Creativity is perhaps what most differentiates humans from other species.
Understanding creativity is particularly important in times of accelerated cultural and environmental change, such as the present, in which novel approaches and perspectives are needed.
The study of creativity is an exciting area that brings together many different branches of research: cognitive psychology, social psychology, personality psychology, developmental psychology, organizational psychology, clinical psychology, neuroscience, mathematical models, and computer simulations.
The creative process is thought to involve the capacity to shift between divergent and convergent modes of thought in response to task demands.
Divergent thought is conventionally characterized as the kind of thinking needed for open-ended tasks, and it is measured by the ability to generate multiple solutions, while convergent thought is commonly characterized as the kind of thinking needed for tasks in which there is only one correct solution.
More recently, divergent thought has been conceived of as reflecting on the task from unconventional contexts or perspectives, while convergent thought has been conceived of as reflecting on it from conventional contexts or perspectives.
Personality traits correlated with creativity include openness to experience, tolerance of ambiguity, impulsivity, and self-confidence.
Evidence that creativity is linked with affective disorders is mixed.
Neuroscientific research on creativity using electroencephalography (EEG) or functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) suggests that creativity is associated with a loosening of cognitive control and decreased arousal.
It has been shown that the distributed, content-addressable structure of associative memory is conducive to bringing task-relevant items to mind without the need for explicit search.
Tangible evidence of human creativity dates back to the earliest stone tools devised over three million years ago, with the Middle-Upper Paleolithic marking the onset of art, science, and religion, and another surge of creativity in the present.
Past and current areas of controversy concern the relative contributions of expertise, chance, and intuition, whether the emphasis should be on process versus product, whether creativity is a domain-specific or a domain-general function, the extent to which creativity is correlated with affective disorders, and whether divergent thinking entails the generation of multiple ideas or the honing of a single initially ambiguous mental representation that may manifest as different external outputs.
Promising areas for further psychological study of creativity include computational modeling, research on the biological basis of creativity, and studies that track specific creative ideation processes over time.
Related Results
Creative Pedagogy - Supporting Children’s Creativity Through Drama
Creative Pedagogy - Supporting Children’s Creativity Through Drama
Drama education is still a rather young field of science. Thus, there is an obvious need to conceptualize the elements and factors related to drama education fostering children’s c...
THE VERBAL CREATIVITY OF PRESCHOOLERS AS A PEDAGOGICAL PROBLEM
THE VERBAL CREATIVITY OF PRESCHOOLERS AS A PEDAGOGICAL PROBLEM
The article has considered and analyzed psychological and pedagogical approaches to the problem of children’s creativity, especially children of preschool age. We have shown the vi...
Advances in Team Creativity Research
Advances in Team Creativity Research
Although creativity research has historically focused on individuals, with more and more employees working in teams, researchers have started to explore the construct of team creat...
The dynamics of L2 teacher boredom and their link to creativity: A ban or boon for boredom
The dynamics of L2 teacher boredom and their link to creativity: A ban or boon for boredom
AbstractResearch has revealed a prevalence of boredom among L2 teachers, despite efforts to mitigate this negative emotion. The interplay between teacher boredom and creativity, es...
Manajemen Kelas Daring Pada Masa Covid-19 Di Sekolah Dasar Maitreyawira Palembang
Manajemen Kelas Daring Pada Masa Covid-19 Di Sekolah Dasar Maitreyawira Palembang
The purpose of this study was to determine the relationship between fluency and teacher creativity, the relationship between flexibility and teacher creativity, the relationship be...
Workplace ostracism and employee creativity: role of defensive silence and psychological empowerment
Workplace ostracism and employee creativity: role of defensive silence and psychological empowerment
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to study the impact of workplace ostracism and defensive silence on employee behavior within an organization. The paper attem...
Everyday creativity and cultural policy
Everyday creativity and cultural policy
A considerable amount of attention has recently been paid – in academia, policy and the arts sector in the United Kingdom – to the idea of ‘everyday creativity’, yet the significan...
Thinking Style Moderates the Impact of the Classroom Environment on Language Creativity
Thinking Style Moderates the Impact of the Classroom Environment on Language Creativity
The classroom environment significantly affects the development of creativity. This study examined the impact of the classroom environment on students’ creativity and the moderatin...

