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This article may lend undue weight to certain ideas incidents or controversies Please help improve it by rewriting it in a balanced fashion that contextualizes different points of view June 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article December 2019 Creativity is a characteristic of someone or some process that forms something novel and valuable The created item may be intangible such as an idea a scientific theory a musical composition or a joke or a physical object such as an invention a printed literary work or a painting Creativity enables people to solve problems in new or innovative ways A picture of an incandescent light bulb is associated with someone having an idea an example of creativity Scholarly interest in creativity is found in a number of disciplines primarily psychology business studies and cognitive science However it is also present in education the humanities including philosophy and the arts theology and the social sciences such as sociology linguistics and economics as well as engineering technology and mathematics These disciplines cover the relations between creativity and general intelligence personality type mental and neural processes mental health and artificial intelligence the potential for fostering creativity through education training leadership and organizational practices the factors that determine how creativity is evaluated and perceived the application of creative resources to improve the effectiveness of teaching and learning and the fostering of creativity for national economic benefit According to Harvard Business School it benefits business by encouraging innovation boosting productivity enabling adaptability and fostering growth EtymologyThe English word creativity comes from the Latin terms creare meaning to create and facere meaning to make Its derivational suffixes also comes from Latin The word create appeared in English as early as the 14th century notably in Chaucer s The Parson s Tale to indicate divine creation The modern meaning of creativity in reference to human creation did not emerge until after the Enlightenment DefinitionIn a summary of scientific research into creativity Michael Mumford suggests We seem to have reached a general agreement that creativity involves the production of novel useful products In Robert Sternberg s words creativity produces something original and worthwhile Authors have diverged dramatically in their precise definitions beyond these general commonalities Peter Meusburger estimates that over a hundred different definitions can be found in the literature typically elaborating on the context field organization environment etc that determines the originality and or appropriateness of the created object and the processes through which it came about As an illustration one definition given by Dr E Paul Torrance in the context of assessing an individual s creative ability is a process of becoming sensitive to problems deficiencies gaps in knowledge missing elements disharmonies and so on identifying the difficulty searching for solutions making guesses or formulating hypotheses about the deficiencies testing and retesting these hypotheses and possibly modifying and retesting them and finally communicating the results Ignacio L Gotz following the etymology of the word argues that creativity is not necessarily making He confines it to the act of creating without thinking about the end product While many definitions of creativity seem almost synonymous with originality he also emphasized the difference between creativity and originality Gotz asserted that one can be creative without necessarily being original When someone creates something they are certainly creative at that point but they may not be original in the case that their creation is not something new However originality and creativity can go hand in hand Creativity in general is usually distinguished from innovation in particular where the stress is on implementation For example Teresa Amabile and Pratt define creativity as the production of novel and useful ideas and innovation as the implementation of creative ideas while the OECD and Eurostat state that Innovation is more than a new idea or an invention An innovation requires implementation either by being put into active use or by being made available for use by other parties firms individuals or organizations There is also emotional creativity which is described as a pattern of cognitive abilities and personality traits related to originality and appropriateness in emotional experience Conceptual historyGreek philosophers like Plato rejected the concept of creativity preferring to see art as a form of discovery Asked in The Republic Will we say of a painter that he makes something Plato answers Certainly not he merely imitates Ancient Most ancient cultures including Ancient Greece Ancient China and Ancient India lacked the concept of creativity seeing art as a form of discovery and not creation The ancient Greeks had no terms corresponding to to create or creator except for the expression poiein to make which only applied to poiesis poetry and to the poietes poet or maker who made it Plato did not believe in art as a form of creation Asked in The Republic Will we say of a painter that he makes something he answers Certainly not he merely imitates It is commonly argued by whom that the notion of creativity originated in Western cultures through Christianity asa matter of clarification needed divine inspiration According to scholars the earliest Western conception of creativity was the Biblical story of the creation given in Genesis 18 However this is not creativity in the modern sense which did not arise until the Renaissance In the Judeo Christian tradition creativity was the sole province of God humans were not considered to have the ability to create something new except as an expression of God s work A concept similar to that in Christianity existed in Greek culture For instance Muses were seen as mediating inspiration from the gods Romans and Greeks invoked the concept of an external creative daemon Greek or genius Latin linked to the sacred or the divine However none of these views are similar to the modern concept of creativity and the rejection of creativity in favor of discovery and the belief that individual creation was a conduit of the divine would dominate the West probably until the Renaissance and even later 18 19 Renaissance It was during the Renaissance that creativity was first seen not as a conduit for the divine but from the abilities of great men 18 19 The development of the modern concept of creativity began in the Renaissance when creation began to be perceived as having originated from the abilities of the individual and not God This could be attributed to the leading intellectual movement of the time aptly named humanism which developed an intensely human centric outlook on the world valuing the intellect and achievement of the individual From this philosophy arose the Renaissance man or polymath an individual who embodies the principles of humanism in their ceaseless courtship with knowledge and creation One of the most well known and immensely accomplished examples is Leonardo da Vinci Enlightenment and thereafter However the shift from divine inspiration to the abilities of the individual was gradual and would not become immediately apparent until the Enlightenment 19 21 By the 18th century and the Age of Enlightenment mention of creativity notably in aesthetics linked with the concept of imagination became more frequent In the writing of Thomas Hobbes imagination became a key element of human cognition William Duff was one of the first to identify imagination as a quality of genius typifying the separation being made between talent productive but not new ground and genius As an independent topic of study creativity effectively received no attention until the 19th century Runco and Albert argue that creativity as the subject of proper study began seriously to emerge in the late 19th century with the increased interest in individual differences inspired by the arrival of Darwinism In particular they refer to the work of Francis Galton who through his eugenicist outlook took a keen interest in the heritability of intelligence with creativity taken as an aspect of genius In the late 19th and early 20th centuries leading mathematicians and scientists such as Hermann von Helmholtz 1896 and Henri Poincare 1908 began to reflect on and publicly discuss their creative processes Modern The insights of Poincare and von Helmholtz were built on in early accounts of the creative process by pioneering theorists such as Graham Wallas and Max Wertheimer In his work Art of Thought published in 1926 Wallas presented one of the first models of the creative process In the Wallas stage model creative insights and illuminations may be explained by a process consisting of five stages preparation preparatory work on a problem that focuses the individual s mind on the problem and explores the problem s dimensions incubation in which the problem is internalized into the unconscious mind and nothing appears externally to be happening intimation the creative person gets a feeling that a solution is on its way illumination or insight in which the creative idea bursts forth from its preconscious processing into conscious awareness verification in which the idea is consciously verified elaborated and then applied Wallas model is also often treated as four stages with intimation seen as a sub stage Wallas considered creativity to be a legacy of the evolutionary process which allowed humans to quickly adapt to rapidly changing environments Simonton provides an updated perspective on this view in his book Origins of Genius Darwinian Perspectives on creativity In 1927 Alfred North Whitehead gave the Gifford Lectures at the University of Edinburgh later published as Process and Reality He is credited with having coined the term creativity to serve as the ultimate category of his metaphysical scheme Whitehead actually coined the term our term still the preferred currency of exchange among literature science and the arts a term that quickly became so popular so omnipresent that its invention within living memory and by Alfred North Whitehead of all people quickly became occluded Although psychometric studies of creativity had been conducted by The London School of Psychology as early as 1927 with the work of H L Hargreaves into the Faculty of Imagination the formal psychometric measurement of creativity from the standpoint of orthodox psychological literature is usually considered to have begun with J P Guilford s address to the American Psychological Association in 1950 The address helped to popularize the study of creativity and to focus attention on scientific approaches to conceptualizing creativity Statistical analyzes led to the recognition of creativity as measured as a separate aspect of human cognition from IQ type intelligence into which it had previously been subsumed Guilford s work suggested that above a threshold level of IQ the relationship between creativity and classically measured intelligence broke down Across cultures Creativity is viewed differently in different countries For example cross cultural research centered in Hong Kong found that Westerners view creativity more in terms of the individual attributes of a creative person such as their aesthetic taste while Chinese people view creativity more in terms of the social influence of creative people i e what they can contribute to society Mpofu et al surveyed 28 African languages and found that 27 had no word which directly translated to creativity the exception being Arabic 465 The linguistic relativity hypothesis i e that language can affect thought suggests that the lack of an equivalent word for creativity may affect the views of creativity among speakers of such languages However more research would be needed to establish this and there is certainly no suggestion that this linguistic difference makes people any less or more creative Nevertheless it is true that there has been very little research on creativity in Africa 458 and there has also been very little research on creativity in Latin America Creativity has been more thoroughly researched in the northern hemisphere but here again there are cultural differences even between countries or groups of countries in close proximity For example in Scandinavian countries creativity is seen as an individual attitude which helps in coping with life s challenges while in Germany creativity is seen more as a process that can be applied to help solve problems Classification Four C model James C Kaufman and Ronald A Beghetto introduced a four C model of creativity The four C s are the following mini c transformative learning involving personally meaningful interpretations of experiences actions and insights little c everyday problem solving and creative expression Pro C exhibited by people who are professionally or vocationally creative though not necessarily eminent Big C creativity considered great in the given field This model was intended to help accommodate models and theories of creativity that stressed competence as an essential component and the historical transformation of a creative domain as the highest mark of creativity It also the authors argued made a useful framework for analyzing creative processes in individuals The contrast between the terms Big C and Little C has been widely used Kozbelt Beghetto and Runco use a little c Big C model to review major theories of creativity Margaret Boden distinguishes between h creativity historical and p creativity personal Ken Robinson and Anna Craft focused on creativity in a general population particularly with respect to education Craft makes a similar distinction between high and little c creativity and cites Robinson as referring to high and democratic creativity Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi defined creativity in terms of individuals judged to have made significant creative perhaps domain changing contributions Simonton analyzed the career trajectories of eminent creative people in order to map patterns and predictors of creative productivity Four P s aspects Theories of creativity and empirical investigations of why some people are more creative than others have focused on a variety of aspects The dominant factors are usually identified as the four P s a framework first put forward by Mel Rhodes Process A focus on process is shown in cognitive approaches that try to describe thought mechanisms and techniques for creative thinking Theories invoking divergent rather than convergent thinking such as that of Guilford or those describing the staging of the creative process such as that of Wallas are primarily theories of the creative process Product A focus on a creative product usually attempts to assess creative output whether for psychometrics see below or to understand why some objects are considered creative It is from a consideration of product that the standard definition of creativity as the production of something novel and useful arises Person A focus on the nature of the creative person considers more general intellectual habits such as openness levels of ideation autonomy expertise exploratory behavior and so on Press and place A focus on place or press considers the circumstances in which creativity flourishes such as degrees of autonomy access to resources and the nature of gatekeepers Creative lifestyles are characterized by nonconforming attitudes and behaviors as well as flexibility Five A s aspects In 2013 based on a sociocultural critique of the Four P model as individualistic static and decontextualized Vlad Petre Glăveanu proposed a five A s model consisting of actor action artifact audience and affordance In this model the actor is the person with attributes but also located within social networks action is the process of creativity not only in internal cognitive terms but also external bridging the gap between ideation and implementation artifacts emphasize how creative products typically represent cumulative innovations over time rather than abrupt discontinuities and press place is divided into audience and affordance which consider the interdependence of the creative individual with the social and material world respectively Although not supplanting the four Ps model in creativity research the five As model has exerted influence over the direction of some creativity research and has been credited with bringing coherence to studies across a number of creative domains Process theoriesThis section may require copy editing for length You can assist by editing it June 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message There has been much empirical study in psychology and cognitive science of the processes through which creativity occurs Interpretation of the results of these studies has led to several possible explanations of the sources and methods of creativity Incubation Incubation is a temporary break from creative problem solving that can result in insight Empirical research has investigated whether as the concept of incubation in Wallas s model implies a period of interruption or rest from a problem may aid creative problem solving Early work proposed that creative solutions to problems arise mysteriously from the unconscious mind while the conscious mind is occupied on other tasks This hypothesis is discussed in Csikszentmihalyi s five phase model of the creative process which describes incubation as a time when your unconscious takes over This was supposed to allow for unique connections to be made without our consciousness trying to make logical order out of the problem Ward lists various hypotheses that have been advanced to explain why incubation may aid creative problem solving and notes how some empirical evidence is consistent with a different hypothesis Incubation aids creative problems in that it enables forgetting of misleading clues The absence of incubation may lead the problem solver to become fixated on inappropriate strategies of solving the problem Divergent thinking J P Guilford drew a distinction between convergent and divergent production commonly renamed convergent and divergent thinking Convergent thinking involves aiming for a single correct or best solution to a problem e g How can we get a crewed rocket to land on the moon safely and within budget Divergent thinking on the other hand involves the creative generation of multiple answers to an open ended prompt e g How can a chair be used Divergent thinking is sometimes used as a synonym for creativity in psychology literature or is considered the necessary precursor to creativity However as Runco points out there is a clear distinction between creative thinking and divergent thinking Creative thinking focuses on the production combination and assessment of ideas to formulate something new and unique while divergent thinking focuses on the act of conceiving of a variety of ideas that are not necessarily new or unique Other researchers have occasionally used the terms flexible thinking or fluid intelligence which are also roughly similar to but not synonymous with creativity While convergent and divergent thinking differ greatly in terms of approach to problem solving it is believed by whom that both are employed to some degree when solving most real world problems Geneplore model In 1992 Finke et al proposed the Geneplore model in which creativity takes place in two phases a generative phase where an individual constructs mental representations called preinventive structures and an exploratory phase where those structures are used to come up with creative ideas Some evidence shows that when people use their imagination to develop new ideas those ideas are structured in predictable ways by the properties of existing categories and concepts Weisberg argued by contrast that creativity involves ordinary cognitive processes yielding extraordinary results Explicit Implicit Interaction theory Helie and Sun proposed a framework for understanding creativity in problem solving namely the Explicit Implicit Interaction EII theory of creativity This theory attempts to provide a more unified explanation of relevant phenomena in part by reinterpreting integrating various fragmentary existing theories of incubation and insight The EII theory relies mainly on five basic principles the co existence of and the difference between explicit and implicit knowledge simultaneous involvement of implicit and explicit processes in most tasks redundant representation of explicit and implicit knowledge integration of the results of explicit and implicit processing iterative and possibly bidirectional processing A computational implementation of the theory was developed based on the CLARION cognitive architecture and used to simulate relevant human data This work is an initial step in the development of process based theories of creativity encompassing incubation insight and various other related phenomena Conceptual blending In The Act of Creation Arthur Koestler introduced the concept of bisociation that creativity arises as a result of the intersection of two quite different frames of reference In the 1990s various approaches in cognitive science that dealt with metaphor analogy and structure mapping converged and a new integrative approach to the study of creativity in science art and humor emerged under the label conceptual blending Honing theory Honing theory developed principally by psychologist Liane Gabora posits that creativity arises due to the self organizing self mending nature of a worldview The creative process is a way in which the individual hones and re hones an integrated worldview Honing theory places emphasis not only on the externally visible creative outcome but also on the internal cognitive restructuring and repair of the worldview brought about by the creative process and production When one is faced with a creatively demanding task there is an interaction between one s conception of the task and one s worldview The conception of the task changes through interaction with the worldview and the worldview changes through interaction with the task This interaction is reiterated until the task is complete at which point the task is conceived of differently and the worldview is subtly or drastically transformed following the natural tendency of a worldview to attempt to resolve dissonance and seek internal consistency amongst its components whether they be ideas attitudes or bits of knowledge Dissonance in a person s worldview is in some cases generated by viewing their peers creative outputs and so people pursue their own creative endeavors to restructure their worldviews and reduce dissonance This shift in worldview and cognitive restructuring through creative acts has also been considered as a way to explain possible benefits of creativity on mental health The theory also addresses challenges not addressed by other theories of creativity such as the factors guiding restructuring and the evolution of creative works A central feature of honing theory is the notion of a potential state Honing theory posits that creative thought proceeds not by searching through and randomly mutating predefined possibilities but by drawing upon associations that exist due to overlap in the distributed neural cell assemblies that participate in the encoding of experiences in memory Midway through the creative process one may have made associations between the current task and previous experiences but not yet disambiguated which aspects of those previous experiences are relevant to the current task Thus the creative idea may feel half baked At that point it can be said to be in a potentiality state because how it will actualize depends on the different internally or externally generated contexts it interacts with Honing theory is held to explain certain phenomena not dealt with by other theories of creativity for example how different works by the same creator exhibit a recognizable style or voice even in different creative outlets This is not predicted by theories of creativity that emphasize chance processes or the accumulation of expertise but it is predicted by honing theory according to which personal style reflects the creator s uniquely structured worldview Another example is the environmental stimulus for creativity Creativity is commonly considered to be fostered by a supportive nurturing and trustworthy environment conducive to self actualization In line with this idea Gabora posits that creativity is a product of culture and that our social interactions evolve our culture in way that promotes creativity Everyday imaginative thought In everyday thought people often spontaneously imagine alternatives to reality when they think if only Their counterfactual thinking is viewed as an example of everyday creative processes It has been proposed that the creation of counterfactual alternatives to reality depends on similar cognitive processes to rational thought Imaginative thought in everyday life can be categorized based on whether it involves perceptual motor related mental imagery novel combinatorial processing or altered psychological states This classification aids in understanding the neural foundations and practical implications of imagination Creative thinking is a central aspect of everyday life encompassing both controlled and undirected processes This includes divergent thinking and stage models highlighting the importance of extra and meta cognitive contributions to imaginative thought Brain network dynamics play a crucial role in creative cognition The default and executive control networks in the brain cooperate during creative tasks suggesting a complex interaction between these networks in facilitating everyday imaginative thought Dialectical theory The term dialectical theory of creativity dates back to psychoanalyst Daniel Dervin and was later developed into an interdisciplinary theory page needed The dialectical theory of creativity starts with the ancient concept that creativity takes place in an interplay between order and chaos Similar ideas can be found in neuroscience and psychology Neurobiologically it can be shown that the creative process takes place in a dynamic interplay between coherence and incoherence that leads to new and usable neuronal networks Psychology shows how the dialectics of convergent and focused thinking with divergent and associative thinking leads to new ideas and products Personality traits like the Big Five seem to bedialectically intertwined in clarification needed the creative process emotional instability vs stability extraversion vs introversion openness vs reserve agreeableness vs antagonism and disinhibition vs constraint The dialectical theory of creativity applies how also to counseling and psychotherapy Neuroeconomic framework Lin and Vartanian developed a neurobiological description of creative cognition This interdisciplinary framework integrates theoretical principles and empirical results from neuroeconomics reinforcement learning cognitive neuroscience and neurotransmission research on the locus coeruleus system It describes how decision making processes studied by neuroeconomists as well as activity in the locus coeruleus system underlie creative cognition and the large scale brain network dynamics associated with creativity It suggests that creativity is an optimization and utility maximization problem that requires individuals to determine the optimal way to exploit and explore ideas the multi armed bandit problem This utility maximization process is thought to be mediated by the locus coeruleus system and this creativity framework describes how tonic and phasic locus coeruleus activity work in conjunction to facilitate the exploiting and exploring of creative ideas This framework not only explains previous empirical results but also makes novel and falsifiable predictions at different levels of analysis ranging from neurobiological to cognitive and personality differences Behaviorism theory B F Skinner attributed creativity to accidental behaviors that are reinforced by the environment In behaviorism creativity can be understood as novel or unusual behaviors that are reinforced if they produce a desired outcome Spontaneous behaviors by living creatures are thought to reflect past learned behaviors In this way a behaviorist may say that prior learning caused novel behaviors to be reinforced many times over and the individual has been shaped to produce increasingly novel behaviors A creative person according to this definition is someone who has been reinforced more often for novel behaviors than others Behaviorists suggest that anyone can be creative they just need to be reinforced to learn to produce novel behaviors Investment theory Another theory about creative people is the investment theory of creativity This approach suggests that many individual and environmental factors must exist in precise ways for extremely high levels of creativity opposed to average levels of creativity to result In the investment sense a person with their particular characteristics in their particular environment may see an opportunity to devote their time and energy into something that has been overlooked by others The creative person develops an undervalued or under recognized idea to the point that it is established as a new and creative idea Just like in the financial world some investments are worth the buy in while others are less productive and do not build to the extent that the investor expected This investment theory of creativity asserts that creativity might rely to some extent on the right investment of effort being added to a field at the right time in the right way full citation needed Computational creativity Jurgen Schmidhuber s formal theory of creativity postulates that creativity curiosity and interestingness are by products of a simple computational principle for measuring and optimizing learning progress Consider an agent able to manipulate its environment and thus its own sensory inputs The agent can use a black box optimization method such as reinforcement learning to learn through informed trial and error sequences of actions that maximize the expected sum of its future reward signals There are extrinsic reward signals for achieving externally given goals such as finding food when hungry But Schmidhuber s objective function to be maximized also includes an additional intrinsic term to model wow effects This non standard term motivates purely creative behavior of the agent even when there are no external goals A wow effect is formally defined as follows As the agent is creating and predicting and encoding the continually growing history of actions and sensory inputs it keeps improving the predictor or encoder which can be implemented as an artificial neural network or some other machine learning device that can exploit regularities in the data to improve its performance over time The improvements can be measured precisely by computing the difference in computational costs storage size number of required synapses errors time needed to encode new observations before and after learning This difference depends on the encoder s present subjective clarification needed knowledge which changes over time but the theory formally takes this into account The cost difference measures the strength of the present wow effect due to sudden improvements in data compression or computational speed It becomes an intrinsic reward signal for the action selector The objective function thus motivates the action optimizer to create action sequences causing more wow effects Irregular random data or noise do not permit any wow effects or learning progress and thus are boring by nature providing no reward Already known and predictable regularities also are boring Temporarily interesting are only the initially unknown novel regular patterns in both actions and observations This motivates the agent to perform continual open ended active creative exploration Schmidhuber s work is highly influential in intrinsic motivation which has emerged as a research topic as part of the study of artificial intelligence and robotics According to Schmidhuber his objective function explains the activities of scientists artists and comedians For example physicists are motivated to create experiments leading to observations that obey previously unpublished physical laws permitting better data compression Likewise composers receive intrinsic reward for creating non arbitrary melodies with unexpected but regular harmonies that permit wow effects through data compression improvements Similarly a comedian gets intrinsic reward for inventing a novel joke with an unexpected punch line related to the beginning of the story in an initially unexpected but quickly learnable way that also allows for better compression of the perceived data Schmidhuber augured that computer hardware advances would greatly scale up rudimentary artificial scientists and artists He used the theory to create low complexity art and an attractive human face Personal assessmentPsychometric approaches History J P Guilford s group which pioneered the modern psychometric study of creativity constructed several performance based tests to measure creativity in 1967 including asking participants to write original titles for a story with a given plot asking participants to come up with unusual uses for everyday objects like bricks and asking participants to generate a list of consequences of unexpected events like the loss of gravity Guilford was trying to create a model for intellect as a whole but in doing so he also created a model for creativity Guilford made an important assumption which was needed for creativity research that creativity was not an abstract concept The idea that creativity was a category clarification needed rather than a single concept enabled other researchers to look at creativity with a new perspective Additionally Guilford hypothesized one of the first models for the components of creativity He explained that creativity was a result of having three qualities the ability to recognize problems fluency and flexibility Fluency encompassed ideational fluency or the ability to rapidly produce a variety of ideas fulfilling stated requirements associational fluency or the ability to generate a list of words associated with a given word and expressional fluency or the ability to organize words into larger units like phrases sentences and paragraphs Flexibility encompassed both spontaneous flexibility or the general ability to be flexible and adaptive flexibility or the ability to produces responses that are novel and high in quality This represents the base model which several researchers would alter to produce their new theories of creativity years later Building on Guilford s work tests were developed sometimes called Divergent Thinking DT tests which have been both supported and criticized One example is the Torrance Tests of Creative Thinking developed in 1966 They involved tasks of divergent thinking and other problem solving skills which were scored on four categories fluency the total number of meaningful and relevant ideas generated flexibility the number of different categories of responses originality the statistical rarity of the responses and elaboration the amount of detail given Computer scoring Considerable progress has been made in the automated scoring of divergent thinking tests using a semantic approach When compared to human raters NLP techniques are reliable and valid for scoring originality Computer programs were able to achieve a correlation to human graders of 0 60 and 0 72 Semantic networks also devise originality scores that yield significant correlations with socio personal measures A team of researchers led by James C Kaufman and Mark A Runco combined expertise in creativity research natural language processing computational linguistics and statistical data analysis to devise a scalable system for computerized automated testing the SparcIt Creativity Index Testing system This system enabled automated scoring of DT tests that is reliable objective and scalable thus addressing most of the issues of DT tests that had been found and reported The resultant computer system was able to achieve a correlation to human graders of 0 73 Social personality approaches Researchers have taken a social personality approach by using personality traits such as independence of judgement self confidence attraction to complexity aesthetic orientation and risk taking as measures of personal creativity Within the framework of the Big Five personality traits a consistent few of these traits have emerged as being correlated to creativity Openness to experience is consistently related to how a host of different assessments of creativity better source needed On the other Big Five traits research has demonstrated subtle differences between different domains of creativity Compared to non artists artists tend to have higher levels of openness to experience and lower levels of conscientiousness while scientists are more open to experience conscientious and higher in the confidence dominance facets of extraversion compared to non scientists better source needed Self report questionnaires Biographical methods use quantitative characteristics such as the number of publications patents or performances of a work can be credited to a person While this method was originally developed for highly creative personalities citation needed today it is also available as self report questionnaires supplemented with frequent less outstanding creative behaviors such as writing a short story or creating your own recipes clarification needed The self report questionnaire most frequently used in research is the Creative Achievement Questionnaire better source needed a self report test that measures creative achievement across ten domains which described in 2005 and shown to be reliable when compared to other measures of creativity and to independent evaluation of creative output FactorsIntelligence The potential relationship between creativity and intelligence has been of interest since the last half of the twentieth century when many influential studies focused not only on creativity but also on intelligence This joint focus highlights both the theoretical and practical importance of the relationship researchers are interested not only if the constructs are related but also how and why There are multiple theories accounting for their relationship with the three main theories citation needed Threshold theory states that intelligence is a necessary but not sufficient condition for creativity and that there is a moderate positive relationship between creativity and intelligence until IQ 120 Certification theory states that creativity is not intrinsically related to intelligence Instead individuals are required to meet the requisite level of intelligence in order to gain a certain level of education or work which then in turn offers the opportunity to be creative In this theory displays of creativity are moderated by intelligence Interference theory states in contrast that extremely high intelligence might interfere with creative ability Sternberg and O Hara proposed a different framework of five possible relationships between creativity and intelligence that creativity was a subset of intelligence that intelligence was a subset of creativity that the two constructs overlapped that they were both part of the same construct coincident sets or that they were distinct constructs disjoint sets Creativity as a subset of intelligence A number of researchers include creativity either explicitly or implicitly as a key component of intelligence for example Sternberg s Theory of Successful Intelligence includes creativity as a main component and comprises three sub theories contextual analytic contextual practical and experiential creative Experiential sub theory the ability to use pre existing knowledge and skills to solve new and novel problems is directly related to creativity The Cattell Horn Carroll theory CHC includes creativity as a subset of intelligence associated with the broad group factor of long term storage and retrieval Glr Glr narrow abilities relating to creativity include ideational fluency associational fluency and originality creativity Silvia et al conducted a study to look at the relationship between divergent thinking and verbal fluency tests and reported that both fluency and originality in divergent thinking were significantly affected by the broad level Glr factor Martindale extended the CHC theory by proposing that people who are creative are also selective in their processing speed Martindale argues that in the creative process larger amounts of information are processed more slowly in the early stages and as a person begins to understand the problem the processing speed is increased The Dual Process Theory of Intelligence posits a two factor or type model of intelligence Type 1 is a conscious process and concerns goal directed thoughts which are explained by Type 2 is an unconscious process and concerns spontaneous cognition which encompasses daydreaming and implicit learning ability Kaufman argues that creativity occurs as a result of Type 1 and Type 2 processes working together in combination Each type in the creative process can be used to varying degrees Intelligence as a subset of creativity In this relationship model intelligence is a key component in the development of creativity for example Sternberg amp Lubart s Investment Theory using the metaphor of a stock market demonstrates that creative thinkers are like good investors they buy low and sell high in their ideas Like undervalued or low valued stock creative individuals generate unique ideas that are initially rejected by other people The creative individual has to persevere and convince others of the idea s value After convincing the others and thus increasing the idea s value the creative individual sells high by leaving the idea with the other people and moves on to generate another idea According to this theory six distinct but related elements contribute to successful creativity intelligence knowledge thinking styles personality motivation and environment Intelligence is just one of the six factors that can either solely or in conjunction with the other five factors generate creative thoughts Amabile s Componential Model of Creativity posits three within individual components needed for creativity domain relevant skills creativity relevant processes and task motivation and one component external to the individual their surrounding social environment Creativity requires the confluence of all components High creativity will result when a person is intrinsically motivated possesses both a high level of domain relevant skills and has high skills in creative thinking and is working in a highly creative environment The Amusement Park Theoretical Model is a four step theory in which domain specific and generalist views are integrated into a model of creativity The researchers make use of the metaphor of the amusement park to demonstrate that within each of the following creative levels intelligence plays a key role To get into the amusement park there are initial requirements e g time transport to go to the park Initial requirements like intelligence are necessary but not sufficient for creativity They are more like prerequisites for creativity and if a person does not possess the basic level of the initial requirement intelligence then they will not be able to generate creative thoughts behaviour Secondly there are the subcomponents general thematic areas that increase in specificity Like choosing which type of amusement park to visit e g a zoo or a water park these areas relate to the areas in which someone could be creative e g poetry Thirdly there are specific domains After choosing the type of park to visit e g a waterpark you then have to choose which specific park to go to For example within the poetry domain there are many different types e g free verse riddles sonnets etc that have to be selected from Lastly there are micro domains These are the specific tasks that reside within each domain e g individual lines in a free verse poem individual rides at the waterpark Creativity and intelligence as overlapping yet distinct constructs This possible relationship concerns creativity and intelligence as distinct but intersecting constructs for example In Renzulli s Three Ring Conception of Giftedness giftedness is an overlap of above average intellectual ability creativity and task commitment Under this view creativity and intelligence are distinct constructs but they overlap under the correct conditions In the PASS theory of intelligence the planning component the ability to solve problems make decisions and take action strongly overlaps with the concept of creativity Threshold Theory TT derives from a number of previous research findings that suggested that a threshold exists in the relationship between creativity and intelligence both constructs are moderately positively correlated up to an IQ of 120 Above this threshold if there is a relationship at all it is small and weak TT posits that a moderate level of intelligence is necessary for creativity Creativity and intelligence as coincident sets Under this view researchers posit that there are no differences in the mechanisms underlying creativity between those used in normal problem solving and in normal problem solving there is no need for creativity Thus creativity and intelligence problem solving are the same thing Perkins referred to this as the nothing special view Creativity and intelligence as disjoint sets In this view creativity and intelligence are completely different unrelated constructs Affective influence Some theories suggest that creativity may be particularly susceptible to affective influence The term affect in this context refers to liking or disliking key aspects of the subject in question This work largely follows from findings in psychology regarding the ways in which affective states are involved in human judgment and decision making According to Alice Isen positive affect has three primary effects on cognitive activity First it makes additional cognitive material available for processing increasing the number of cognitive elements available for association Second it leads to defocused attention and a more complex cognitive context increasing the breadth of those elements that are treated as relevant to the problem Third it increases cognitive flexibility increasing the probability that diverse cognitive elements will in fact become associated Together these processes lead positive affect to improve creativity Barbara Fredrickson in her broaden and build model suggests that positive emotions such as joy and love broaden a person s available repertoire of cognitions and actions thus enhancing creativity According to these researchers positive emotions increase the number of cognitive elements available for association attention scope and the number of elements that are relevant to the problem cognitive scope Day by day psychological experiences including emotions perceptions and motivation significantly impact creative performance Creativity is higher when emotions and perceptions are more positive and when intrinsic motivation is stronger Some meta analyses such as Baas et al 2008 of 66 studies about creativity and affect support the link between creativity and positive affect Mental health Links have been identified between creativity and mood disorders particularly manic depressive disorder a k a bipolar disorder and depressive disorder a k a unipolar disorder However different artists have described mental illness as having both positive and negative effects on their work In general people who have worked in the arts industry throughout history have faced many environmental factors that are associated with and can sometimes influence mental illness things such as poverty persecution social alienation psychological trauma substance abuse and high stress Studies A study by psychologist J Philippe Rushton found creativity to correlate with intelligence and psychoticism Another study found creativity to be greater in people with schizotypal personality disorder than in people with either schizophrenia or those without mental health conditions citation needed While divergent thinking was associated with activation of both sides of the prefrontal cortex schizotypal individuals were found to have much greater activation of their right prefrontal cortex specifically That study hypothesized that such individuals are better at accessing both hemispheres allowing them to make novel associations at a faster rate Consistent with this hypothesis ambidexterity is also more common in people with schizotypal personality disorder and schizophrenia citation needed Three studies by Mark Batey and Adrian Furnham demonstrated the relationships between schizotypal personality disorder and hypomanic personality and several different measures of creativity A study of 300 000 persons with schizophrenia bipolar disorder or unipolar depression and their relatives found overrepresentation in creative professions for those with bipolar disorder as well as for undiagnosed siblings of those with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder There was no overall overrepresentation but overrepresentation for artistic occupations among those diagnosed with schizophrenia clarification needed There was no association for those with unipolar depression or their relatives Another study involving more than one million people conducted by Swedish researchers at the Karolinska Institute reported a number of correlations between creative occupations and mental illnesses Writers had a higher risk of anxiety and bipolar disorders schizophrenia unipolar depression and substance abuse and were almost twice as likely as the general population to kill themselves Dancers and photographers were also more likely to have bipolar disorder Those in the creative professions were no more likely to have psychiatric disorders than other people although they were more likely to have a close relative with a disorder including anorexia and to some extent autism the Journal of Psychiatric Research reported Nancy Andreasen was one of the first researchers to carry out a large scale study on creativity and whether mental illnesses have an impact on someone s ability to be creative She expected to find a link between creativity and schizophrenia but her research sample the book authors she pooled had no history of schizophrenia Her findings instead showed that 80 of the creative group previously had some form of mental illness episode in their lifetime When she performed follow up studies over a 15 year period she found that 43 of the authors had bipolar disorder compared to the 1 of the general public In 1989 another study by Kay Redfield Jamison reaffirmed those statistics by having 38 of her sample of authors having a history of mood disorders Anthony Storr a prominent psychiatrist remarked The creative process can be a way of protecting the individual against being overwhelmed by depression a means of regaining a sense of mastery in those who have lost it and to a varying extent a way of repairing the self damaged by bereavement or by the loss of confidence in human relationships which accompanies depression from whatever cause Bipolar disorders People diagnosed with bipolar disorder report themselves as having a larger range of emotional understanding heightened states of perception and an ability to connect better with those in the world around them Other reported traits include higher rates of productivity higher senses of self awareness and a greater understanding of empathy Those who have bipolar disorder also understand their own sense of heightened creativity and ability to get immense amounts of tasks done all at once In one study of 219 participants aged 19 to 63 diagnosed with bipolar disorder 82 of them reported having elevated feelings of creativity during the hypomanic swings A study done by Shapiro and Weisberg also showed a positive correlation between the manic upswings of the cycles of bipolar disorder and the ability for an individual to be more creative The data showed however that it was not the depressive swing that brings forth dark creative spurts but the act of climbing out of the depressive episode that sparks creativity The reason behind this spur of creative genius could come from the type of self image that the person has during a time of hypomania A hypomanic person may feel a bolstered sense of self confidence creative confidence and sense of individualism Opinions Giannouli clarification needed believes that the creativity a person diagnosed with bipolar disorder feels comes as a form of stress management In the realm of music one might be expressing one s stress or pains through the pieces one writes in order to better understand those same feelings Famous authors and musicians along with some actors would often attribute their wild enthusiasm to something like a hypomanic state The artistic side of society has been notorious for behaviors that are seen as maladapted to societal norms Symptoms of bipolar disorder match up with behaviors in high profile creative personalities such as alcohol addiction drug abuse including stimulants depressants hallucinogens and dissociatives opioids inhalants and cannabis difficulties in holding regular occupations interpersonal problems legal issues and a high risk of suicide Weisberg believes that the state of mania sets free the powers of a thinker He implies that not only has the person become more creative but they have fundamentally changed the kind of thoughts they produce In a study of poets who seem to have especially high percentages of bipolar authors over a period of three years those poets would have cycles of really creative and powerful works of poetry The timelines over the three year study looked at the poets personal journals and their clinical records and found that the timelines between their most powerful poems matched that of their upswings in bipolar disorder Personality This section may require copy editing July 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message This article needs more complete citations for verification Please help add missing citation information so that sources are clearly identifiable July 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Creativity can be expressed in a number of different forms depending on unique people and environments Theorists have suggested a number of different models of the creative person However the creativity profiling approach must take into account the tension between predicting the creative profile of an individual as characterized by the psychometric approach and the evidence that team creativity is founded on diversity and difference From a personality traits perspective there are a number of traits that are associated with creativity in people full citation needed Creative people tend to be more open to new experiences are more self confident are more ambitious self accepting impulsive driven dominant and hostile compared to people with less creativity Divergent production One characteristic of creative people as measured by some psychologists is what is called divergent production the ability of a person to generate a diverse assortment of yet an appropriate amount of responses to a given situation One way to measure divergent production is by administering the Torrance Tests of Creative Thinking The Torrance Tests of Creative Thinking assess the diversity quantity and appropriateness of participants responses to a variety of open ended questions Some researchers also emphasize how creative people are better at balancing between divergent and convergent production which depends on an individual s innate preference or ability to explore and exploit ideas Dedication and expertise Other researchers of creativity see what distinguishes creative people as a cognitive process of dedication to problem solving and developing expertise in the field of their creative expression Hardworking people study the work of people before them in their milieu become experts in their fields and then have the ability to add to and build upon previous information in innovative and creative ways In a study of projects by design students students who had more knowledge on their subject on average had greater creativity within their projects full citation needed Motivation The aspect of motivation in a person s personality may also predict their creativity levels Motivation stems from two different sources intrinsic and extrinsic Intrinsic motivation is an internal drive within a person to participate or invest as a result of personal interest desires hopes goals etc Extrinsic motivation is a drive from outside a person and might take the form of payment rewards fame approval from others etc Although extrinsic motivation and intrinsic motivation can both increase creativity in certain cases strictly extrinsic motivation often impedes creativity in people full citation needed Conditions In studying exceptionally creative people in history some common traits in lifestyle and environment are often found Creative people usually had supportive but rigid and non nurturing parents Most had an interest in their field at an early age and most had a highly supportive and skilled mentor in their field of interest Often the field they chose was relatively uncharted allowing for their creativity to be expressed more Most exceptionally creative people devoted almost all of their time and energy into their craft and after about a decade clarification needed had a creative breakthrough of fame Their lives were marked with extreme dedication and a cycle of hard work and breakthroughs as a result of their determination full citation needed In different fieldsNeuroscience This section may lend undue weight to certain ideas incidents or controversies Please help improve it by rewriting it in a balanced fashion that contextualizes different points of view June 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message Distributed functional brain network associated with divergent thinking The neuroscience of creativity looks at the operation of the brain during creative behavior One article writes that creative innovation might require coactivation and communication between regions of the brain that ordinarily are not strongly connected Highly creative people who excel at creative innovation tend to differ from others in three ways first they have a high level of specialized knowledge second they are capable of divergent thinking mediated by the frontal lobe and third they are able to modulate neurotransmitters such as norepinephrine in their frontal lobe Thus the frontal lobe appears to be the part of the cortex that is most important for creativity A 2015 study on creativity found that it involves the interaction of multiple neural networks including those that support associative thinking along with other default mode network functions In 2018 some experiments showed that when the brain suppresses obvious or known solutions the outcome is solutions that are more creative This suppression is mediated by alpha oscillations in the right temporal lobe REM sleep Creativity involves the forming of associative elements into new combinations that are useful or meet some requirement Sleep aids this process better source needed REM rather than NREM sleep appears to be responsible This may be due to changes in cholinergic and noradrenergic neuromodulation that occurs during REM sleep During this period of sleep high levels of acetylcholine in the hippocampus suppress feedback from the hippocampus to the neocortex and lower levels of acetylcholine and norepinephrine in the neocortex encourage the spread of associational activity within neocortical areas without control from the hippocampus This is in contrast to waking consciousness in which higher levels of norepinephrine and acetylcholine inhibit recurrent connections in the neocortex REM sleep may aid creativity by allowing neocortical structures to reorganize associative hierarchies in which information from the hippocampus would be reinterpreted in relation to previous semantic representations or nodes Vandervert model Vandervert described how the brain s frontal lobes and the cognitive functions of the cerebellum collaborate to produce creativity and innovation Vandervert s explanation rests on considerable evidence that all processes of working memory responsible for processing all thought are adaptively modeled for increased efficiency by the cerebellum The cerebellum consisting of 100 billion neurons which is more than the entirety of the rest of the brain also adaptively models all bodily movement for efficiency The cerebellum s adaptive models of working memory processing are then fed back to especially frontal lobe working memory control processes where creative and innovative thoughts arise Apparently creative insight or the aha experience is then triggered in the temporal lobe According to Vandervert the details of creative adaptation begin in forward cerebellar models which are anticipatory exploratory controls for movement and thought These cerebellar processing and control architectures have been termed Hierarchical Modular Selection and Identification for Control HMOSAIC New hierarchically arranged levels of the cerebellar control architecture HMOSAIC develop as mental mulling in working memory is extended over time These new levels of the control architecture are fed forward to the frontal lobes Since the cerebellum adaptively models all movement and all levels of thought and emotion Vandervert s approach helps explain creativity and innovation in sports art music the design of video games technology mathematics the child prodigy and thought in general Vandervert argues that when a person is confronted with a challenging new situation visual spatial working memory and speech related working memory are decomposed and re composed fractionated by the cerebellum and then blended in the cerebral cortex in an attempt to deal with the new situation With repeated attempts to deal with challenging situations the cerebro cerebellar blending process continues to optimize the efficiency of how working memory deals with the situation or problem He also argues that this is the same process only involving visual spatial working memory and pre language vocalization that led to the evolution of language in humans Vandervert and Vandervert Weathers have pointed out that this blending process because it continuously optimizes efficiencies constantly improves prototyping attempts toward the invention or innovation of new ideas music art or technology Prototyping they argue not only produces new products it trains the cerebro cerebellar pathways involved to become more efficient at prototyping itself Further Vandervert and Vandervert Weathers believe that this repetitive mental prototyping or mental rehearsal involving the cerebellum and the cerebral cortex explains the success of the self driven individualized patterning of repetitions initiated by the teaching methods of the Khan Academy The model proposed by Vandervert has however received incisive critique from several authors Flaherty model In 2005 Alice Flaherty presented a three factor model of the creative drive Drawing from evidence in brain imaging drug studies and lesion analysis she described the creative drive as resulting from an interaction of the frontal lobes the temporal lobes and dopamine from the limbic system The frontal lobes may be responsible for idea generation and the temporal lobes for idea editing and evaluation Abnormalities in the frontal lobe such as depression or anxiety generally decrease creativity while abnormalities in the temporal lobe often increase creativity High activity in the temporal lobe typically inhibits activity in the frontal lobe and vice versa High dopamine levels increase general arousal and goal directed behaviors and reduce latent inhibition and all three effects increase the drive to generate ideas Lin and Vartanian model In 2018 Lin and Vartanian proposed a neuroeconomic framework that precisely describes norepinephrine s role in creativity and modulating large scale brain networks associated with creativity This framework describes how neural activity in different brain regions and networks like the default mode network track utility or subjective value of ideas Economics Economic approaches to creativity have focused on three aspects the impact of creativity on economic growth methods of modeling markets for creativity and the maximization of economic creativity innovation citation needed In the early 20th century Joseph Schumpeter introduced the economic theory of creative destruction to describe the way in which old ways of doing things are endogenously destroyed and replaced by the new Some economists such as Paul Romer view creativity as an important element in the recombination of elements to produce new technologies and products and consequently economic growth Creativity leads to capital and creative products are protected by intellectual property laws Mark A Runco and Daniel Rubenson have tried to describe a psychoeconomic model of creativity In such a model creativity is the product of endowments and active investments in creativity the costs and benefits of bringing creative activity to market determine the supply of creativity Such an approach has been criticized for its view of creativity consumption as always having positive utility and for the way it analyzes the value of future innovations In his 2002 book The Rise of the Creative Class economist Richard Florida popularized the notion that regions with 3 T s of economic development Technology Talent and Tolerance also have high concentrations of creative professionals and tend to have a higher level of economic development Sociology Creativity research for most of the twentieth century was dominated by psychology and business studies with little work done in sociology Since the turn of the millennium there has been more attention paid by sociological researchers but it has yet to establish itself as a specific research field with reviews of sociological research into creativity a rarity in high impact literature While psychology has tended to focus on the individual as the locus of creativity sociological research is directed more at the structures and context within which creative activity takes place primarily based in sociology of culture which finds its roots in the works of Marx Durkheim and Weber This has meant a focus on the cultural and creative industries as sociological phenomena Such research has covered a variety of areas including the economics and production of culture the role of creative industries in development and the rise of the creative class Evolutionary theory From an evolutionary perspective creativity may be a result of the outcome of years of generating ideas As ideas are continuously generated the need to evolve produces a need for new ideas and developments dubious discuss As a result people have been creating and developing new innovative and creative ideas to build our progress as a society full citation needed Education Some weasel words see the conventional system of schooling as stifling of creativity and they attempt particularly in the preschool kindergarten and early school years to provide a creativity friendly rich imagination fostering environment for young children Researchers have seen this as important because technology is advancing our society at an unprecedented rate and creative problem solving will be needed to cope with these challenges as they arise In addition to helping with problem solving creativity also helps students identify problems where others have failed to do so The Waldorf School is an example of an education program that promotes creative thought Promoting intrinsic motivation and problem solving are two areas where educators can foster creativity in students Students are more creative when they see a task as intrinsically motivating valued for its own sake To promote creative thinking educators need to identify what motivates their students and to structure teaching around it Providing students with a choice of activities to complete allows them to become more intrinsically motivated and therefore creative in completing the tasks Teaching students to solve problems that do not have well defined answers is another way to foster their creativity This is accomplished by allowing students to explore problems and redefine them possibly drawing on knowledge that at first may seem unrelated to the problem in order to solve it In adults mentoring individuals is another way to foster their creativity However the benefits of mentoring creativity apply only to creative contributions considered great in a given field not to everyday creative expression Musical creativity is a gateway to the flow state which is conducive to spontaneity improvisation and creativity Studies show that it is beneficial to emphasize students creative side and integrate more creativity into their curriculums with a notable strategy being through music One reason for this is that students are able to express themselves through musical improvisation in a way that taps into higher order brain regions while connecting with their peers allowing them to go beyond typical pattern generation In this sense improvisation is a form of self expression that can generate connectivity amongst peers and surpass the age old rudimentary aspects of school Scotland In the Scottish education system creativity is identified as a core skillset for learning life and work and is defined as a process which generates ideas that have value to the individual It involves looking at familiar things with a fresh eye examining problems with an open mind making connections learning from mistakes and using imagination to explore new possibilities The need to develop a shared language and understanding of creativity and its role across every aspect of learning teaching and continuous improvement was identified as a necessary aim and a set of four skills is used to allow educators to discuss and develop creativity skills across all subjects and sectors of education curiosity open mindedness imagination and problem solving Distinctions are made between creative learning when learners are using their creativity skills creative teaching when educators are using their creativity skills and creative change when creativity skills are applied to planning and improvement Scotland s national Creative Learning Plan supports the development of creativity skills in all learners and of educators expertise in developing creativity skills A range of resources have been created to support and assess this including a national review of creativity across learning by Her Majesty s Inspectorate for Education China Recognizes that creativity ability is crucial for national security social development and improving people s benefits Measures have been proposed to enhance creative ability in the country European Union Emphasizes creativity as a transversal theme important for the development of basic skills and has declared 2009 the Year of Creativity and Innovation Countries like France Germany Italy and Spain have incorporated creativity into their education and economic policies Organizational creativityThis section may require copy editing July 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Training meeting in an eco design stainless steel company in Brazil The leaders among other things wish to cheer and encourage the workers in order to achieve a higher level of creativity Various research studies set out to establish that organizational effectiveness depends on the creativity of the workforce to a large extent For any given organization measures of effectiveness vary depending upon its mission environmental context nature of work the product or service it produces and customer demands Thus the first step in evaluating organizational effectiveness is to understand the organization itself how it functions how it is structured and what it emphasizes citation needed Similarly social psychologists organizational scientists and management scientists who research factors that influence creativity and innovation in teams and organizations have developed integrative theoretical models that emphasize the roles of team composition team processes and organizational culture These theoretical models also emphasize the mutually reinforcing relationships between them ambiguous in promoting innovation Research studies of the knowledge economy may be classified into three levels macro meso and micro Macro studies are at a societal or transnational dimension Meso studies focus on organizations Micro investigations center on the minutiae workings of workers There is also an interdisciplinary dimension such as research from businesses economics education human resource management knowledge and organizational management sociology psychology knowledge economy related sectors especially software and advertising Team composition Diversity of team members backgrounds and knowledge can increase team creativity by expanding the collection of unique information that is available to the team and by introducing different perspectives that can integrate in novel ways However under some conditions diversity can also decrease team creativity by making it more difficult for team members to communicate about ideas and causing interpersonal conflicts between those with different perspectives Thus the potential advantages of diversity must be supported by appropriate team processes and organizational cultures in order to enhance creativity Team processes Team communication norms such as respecting others expertise paying attention to others ideas expecting information sharing tolerating disagreements negotiating remaining open to others ideas learning from others and building on each other s ideas increase team creativity by facilitating the social processes involved with brainstorming and problem solving Through these processes team members can access their collective pool of knowledge reach shared understandings identify new ways of understanding problems or tasks and make new connections between ideas Engaging in these social processes also promotes positive team affect which facilitates collective creativity Organizational culture Supportive and motivational environments that create psychological safety by encouraging risk taking and tolerating mistakes increase team creativity as well Organizations in which help seeking help giving and collaboration are rewarded promote innovation by providing opportunities and contexts in which team processes that lead to collective creativity can occur Additionally leadership styles that downplay status hierarchies or power differences within an organization and empower people to speak up about their ideas or opinions also help to create cultures that are conducive to creativity Constraints There is a long standing debate on how material constraints e g lack of money materials or equipment affect creativity In psychological and managerial research two competing views in this regard prevail In one view scholars propose a negative effect of material constraints on innovation and claim that material constraints starve creativity Proponents argue that adequate material resources are needed to engage in creative activities like experimenting with new solutions and idea exploration In an opposing view scholars assert that people tend to stick to established routines or solutions as long as they are not forced to deviate from them by constraints For example material constraints facilitated the development of jet engines in World War II To reconcile these competing views contingency models were proposed The rationale behind these models is that certain contingency factors e g creativity climate or creativity relevant skills influence the relationship between constraints and creativity These contingency factors reflect the need for higher levels of motivation and skills when working on creative tasks under constraints Depending on these contingency factors there is either a positive or negative relationship between constraints and creativity Fostering creativitySeveral researchers have proposed methods of increasing a person s creativity Such ideas range from the psychological cognitive such as the Osborn Parnes Creative Problem Solving Process Synectics science based creative thinking Purdue Creative Thinking Program and Edward de Bono s lateral thinking to the highly structured such as TRIZ the Theory of Inventive Problem Solving and its variant Algorithm of Inventive Problem Solving developed by the Russian scientist Genrich Altshuller and Computer Aided morphological analysis original research An empirical synthesis of which methods work best in enhancing creativity was published by Haase et al Summarising the results of 84 studies the authors found that complex training courses meditation and cultural exposure were most effective in enhancing creativity while the use of cognitive manipulation drugs was noneffective Need for closure Experiments suggest the need for closure of task participants whether as a reflection of personality or induced through time pressure negatively impacts creativity Accordingly it has been suggested that reading fiction which can reduce the cognitive need for closure may help to encourage creativity Malevolent creativitySo called malevolent creativity is the dark side of creativity This type of creativity is not typically accepted within society and is defined by the intention to cause harm to others through original and innovative means While it is often associated with criminal behavior it can also be observed in ordinary day to day life as lying cheating and betrayal Malevolent creativity should be distinguished from negative creativity in that negative creativity may unintentionally cause harm to others whereas malevolent creativity is explicitly malevolently motivated Crime Malevolent creativity is a key contributor to crime and in its most destructive form can even manifest as terrorism As creativity requires deviating from the conventional there is a permanent tension between being creative and going too far in some cases to the point of breaking the law Aggression is a key predictor of malevolent creativity and increased levels of aggression correlate with a higher likelihood of committing crime Predictive factors Although everyone shows some levels of malevolent creativity under certain conditions those that have a higher propensity towards it have increased tendencies to deceive and manipulate others to their own gain While malevolent creativity appears to dramatically increase when an individual is placed under unfair conditions personality particularly aggressiveness is also a key predictor in anticipating levels of malevolent thinking Researchers Harris and Reiter Palmon investigated the role of aggression in levels of malevolent creativity in particular levels of implicit aggression and the tendency to employ aggressive actions in response to problem solving The personality traits of physical aggression conscientiousness emotional intelligence and implicit aggression all seem to be related how with malevolent creativity Harris and Reiter Palmon s research showed that when subjects were presented with a problem that designed to trigger malevolent creativity participants high in implicit aggression and low in premeditation expressed the largest number of malevolently themed solutions When presented with the more benign problem designed to trigger prosocial motives of helping others and cooperating those high in implicit aggression even if they were high in impulsiveness were far less destructive in their imagined solutions The researchers concluded premeditation more than implicit aggression controlled an individual s expression of malevolent creativity The current measure for malevolent creativity is the 13 item Malevolent Creativity Behaviour Scale MCBS Academic journalsCreativity Research Journal International Journal of Creative Computing Journal of Creative Behavior Psychology of Aesthetics Creativity and the Arts Thinking Skills and CreativitySee alsoPhilosophy portalPsychology portalAdaptive performance Brainstorming Computational creativity Confabulation neural networks Content creation Creative age Creativity techniques Daydreaming Dreaming E scape Fantasy prone personality Genius Guided visualization Heroic theory of invention and scientific development History of the concept of creativity Imagination Innovation Invention such as artistic invention in the visual arts Lateral thinking Learned industriousness Multiple discovery Music therapy Musical improvisation Openness to experience Originality Why Man Creates film Notes How Generative AI Can Augment Human Creativity Harvard Business Review 2023 06 16 ISSN 0017 8012 Retrieved 2023 06 20 Anderson Neil Potocnik Kristina Zhou Jing July 2014 Innovation and Creativity in Organizations A State of the Science Review Prospective Commentary and Guiding Framework Journal of Management 40 5 1297 1333 doi 10 1177 0149206314527128 hdl 10454 16825 ISSN 0149 2063 S2CID 44041503 Zhou Jing Wang Xiaoye May Bavato Davide Tasselli Stefano Wu Junfeng July 2019 Understanding the Receiving Side of Creativity A Multidisciplinary Review and Implications for Management Research Journal of Management 45 6 2570 2595 doi 10 1177 0149206319827088 ISSN 0149 2063 S2CID 150033432 The Importance of Creativity in Business HBS Online 25 January 2022 And eke Job saith that in hell is no order of rule And albeit that God hath created all things in the right order and nothing without order but all things be ordered and numbered yet nevertheless they that be damned be not in order nor hold no order Runco Mark A Albert Robert S 2010 Creativity Research In Kaufman James C Sternberg Robert J eds The Cambridge Handbook of Creativity Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 73025 9 Mumford M D 2003 Where have we been where are we going Taking stock in creativity research Creativity Research Journal 15 2 3 110 doi 10 1080 10400419 2003 9651403 S2CID 218546467 Sternberg Robert J Sternberg Karin 2011 Creativity Cognitive Psychology 6 ed Cengage Learning pp 479 483 ISBN 978 1 133 38701 5 Meusburger Peter 2009 Milieus of Creativity The Role of Places Environments and Spatial Contexts In Meusburger P Funke J Wunder E eds Milieus of Creativity An Interdisciplinary Approach to Spatiality of Creativity Springer ISBN 978 1 4020 9876 5 Torrance E Paul Verbal Tests Forms A and B Figural Tests Forms A and B The Torrance Tests of Creative Thinking Norms Technical Manual Research ed Princeton New Jersey Personnel Press p 6 Gotz Ignacio L 1981 On Defining Creativity The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 39 3 JSTOR 297 301 doi 10 2307 430164 ISSN 0021 8529 JSTOR 430164 S2CID 192221761 Amabile Teresa M Pratt Michael G 2016 The dynamic componential model of creativity and innovation in organizations Making progress making meaning Research in Organizational Behavior 36 157 183 doi 10 1016 j riob 2016 10 001 S2CID 44444992 Guidelines for Collecting Reporting and Using Data on Innovation Oslo Manual 2018 The Measurement of Scientific Technological and Innovation Activities 4th ed Paris Luxembourg OECD Eurostat 2018 p 44 doi 10 1787 24132764 ISBN 978 92 64 30455 0 ISSN 2413 2764 Averill James R February 1999 Individual Differences in Emotional Creativity Structure and Correlates Journal of Personality 67 2 331 371 doi 10 1111 1467 6494 00058 ISSN 0022 3506 PMID 10202807 Ivcevic Zorana Brackett Marc A Mayer John D April 2007 Emotional Intelligence and Emotional Creativity Journal of Personality 75 2 199 236 doi 10 1111 j 1467 6494 2007 00437 x ISSN 0022 3506 PMID 17359237 Tatarkiewicz Wladyslaw 1980 A History of Six Ideas an Essay in Aesthetics Melbourne International Philosophy Series Vol 5 Translated by Kasparek Christopher The Hague Martinus Nijhoff Albert Robert S Runco Mark A 1999 A History of Research on Creativity In Sternberg Robert J ed Handbook of Creativity Cambridge University Press pp 16 34 Plato The Republic Book X Niu Weihua Sternberg Robert J 2006 PDF Journal of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology 26 1 2 18 38 doi 10 1037 h0091265 S2CID 143648016 Archived from the original PDF on 19 December 2011 Retrieved 23 October 2010 Weber Michel 2006 Creativity Efficacy and Vision Ethics and Psychology in an Open Universe In Weber Michel Basile Pierfrancesco eds Subjectivity Process and Rationality Process Thought Vol XIV Frankfurt Lancaster ontos verlag pp 263 281 Dacey John 1999 Concepts of Creativity A history In Runco Mark A Pritzer Steven R eds Encyclopedia of Creativity Vol 1 Elsevier ISBN 978 0 12 227076 5 Humanism Rome Reborn The Vatican Library amp Renaissance Culture Exhibitions Library of Congress www loc gov 1993 01 08 Retrieved 2015 11 23 Leonardo da Vinci Italian artist engineer and scientist Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 2015 11 23 von Helmholtz Herman Ludwig 1896 Vortrage und Reden 5th ed Friederich Vieweg und Sohn Poincare Henri 1952 1908 Mathematical creation In Ghiselin B ed The Creative Process A Symposium Mentor Wallas Graham 1926 Art of Thought Simonton D K 1999 Origins of genius Darwinian perspectives on creativity Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 512879 6 Whitehead Alfred North 1978 Process and reality an essay in cosmology Gifford Lectures delivered in the University of Edinburgh during the session 1927 28 Corrected ed New York Free Press ISBN 978 0 02 934580 1 Meyer Steven 2005 Introduction Whitehead Now Configurations 1 13 1 33 doi 10 1353 con 2007 0010 Weber Michel Desmond Will eds 2008 Handbook of Whiteheadian Process Thought Vol X1 amp X2 Frankfurt Lancaster Ontos Verlag Desmet Ronny Weber Michel eds 2010 Whitehead The Algebra of Metaphysics Applied Process Metaphysics Summer Institute Memorandum Louvain la Neuve Les Editions Chromatika Hargreaves H L 1927 The faculty of imagination An enquiry concerning the existence of a general faculty or group factor of imagination British Journal of Psychology Monograph Supplement 3 1 74 Sternberg R J Lubart T I 1999 The Concept of Creativity Prospects and Paradigms In Sternberg R J ed Handbook of Creativity Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 57285 9 Kozbelt Aaron Beghetto Ronald A Runco Mark A 2010 Theories of Creativity In Kaufman James C Sternberg Robert J eds The Cambridge Handbook of Creativity Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 73025 9 Sternberg R J 2006 Introduction In Kaufman J C Sternberg R J eds The International Handbook of Creativity Cambridge University Press pp 1 9 ISBN 0 521 54731 8 Niu W 2006 Development of Creativity Research in Chinese Societies In Kaufman J C Sternberg R J eds The International Handbook of Creativity Cambridge University Press pp 386 387 ISBN 0 521 54731 8 Mpofu E et al 2006 African Perspectives on Creativity In Kaufman J C Sternberg R J eds The International Handbook of Creativity Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 54731 8 Preiss D D Strasser K 2006 Creativity in Latin America In Kaufman J C Sternberg R J eds The International Handbook of Creativity Cambridge University Press p 46 ISBN 0 521 54731 8 Smith G J W Carlsson I 2006 Creativity under the Northern Lights In Kaufman J C Sternberg R J eds The International Handbook of Creativity Cambridge University Press p 202 ISBN 0 521 54731 8 Preiser S 2006 Creativity Research in German Speaking Countries In Kaufman J C Sternberg R J eds The International Handbook of Creativity Cambridge University Press p 175 ISBN 0 521 54731 8 Kaufman James C Beghetto Ronald A 2009 Beyond Big and Little The Four C Model of Creativity Review of General Psychology 13 1 1 12 doi 10 1037 a0013688 S2CID 41410038 Boden Margaret 2004 The 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Scientific Publishing Company pp 51 71 ISBN 978 981 314 189 6 Sternberg Robert J 2009 Perkins Jaime A Moneypenny Dan Co Wilson eds Cognitive Psychology CENGAGE Learning p 468 ISBN 978 0 495 50629 4 Glăveanu Vlad Petre 2013 Rewriting the language of creativity The five A s framework Review of General Psychology 17 1 69 81 doi 10 1037 a0029528 S2CID 143404705 Mattson David Mathew Katie Katz Buonincontro Jen 2021 Media Analysis of News Articles During COVID 19 Renewal Continuity and Cultural Dimensions of Creative Action Frontiers in Psychology 11 601938 doi 10 3389 fpsyg 2020 601938 PMC 7920979 PMID 33664688 Sun Jingyan Okada Takeshi 2021 The process of interactive role making in acting training Thinking Skills and Creativity 41 100860 doi 10 1016 j tsc 2021 100860 Smith Steven M 2011 Incubation In M A Runco S R Pritzker eds Encyclopedia of Creativity Volume I 2nd ed Academic Press pp 653 657 ISBN 978 0 12 375039 6 Anderson J R 2000 Cognitive psychology and its implications Worth 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Management 34 6 842 863 doi 10 1111 jpim 12368 Haase Jennifer Hanel Paul H P Gronau Norbert 27 March 2023 Creativity enhancement methods for adults A meta analysis Psychology of Aesthetics Creativity and the Arts doi 10 1037 aca0000557 S2CID 257794219 Chirumbolo Antonio Livi Stefano Mannetti Lucia Pierro Antonio Kruglanski Arie W 2004 Effects of need for closure on creativity in small group interactions European Journal of Personality 18 4 265 278 doi 10 1002 per 518 S2CID 144190667 Djikic Maja Oatley Keith Moldoveanu Mihnea C 2013 Opening the Closed Mind The Effect of Exposure to Literature on the Need for Closure Creativity Research Journal 25 2 149 154 doi 10 1080 10400419 2013 783735 S2CID 143961189 Cropley David H Cropley Arthur J Kaufman James C et al eds 2010 The Dark Side of Creativity Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 13960 1 McLaren R B 1993 The dark side of creativity Creat Res J 6 1 2 137 144 doi 10 1080 10400419309534472 Hao N Tang M Yang J Wang Q Runco M A 2016 A New Tool to Measure Malevolent Creativity The Malevolent Creativity Behavior Scale Frontiers in Psychology 7 682 doi 10 3389 fpsyg 2016 00682 PMC 4870273 PMID 27242596 Berkowitz Leonard 1962 Aggression A social psychological analysis New York N Y McGraw Hill page needed Harris D J Reiter Palmon R 2015 Fast and furious The influence of implicit aggression premeditation and provoking situations on malevolent creativity Psychology of Aesthetics Creativity and the Arts 9 1 54 64 doi 10 1037 a0038499 Further readingCraft A 2005 Creativity in Schools tensions and dilemmas Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 32414 4 Gielen P 2013 Creativity and other Fundamentalisms Amsterdam Mondriaan Glăveanu Vlad Petre ed 2019 The Creativity Reader Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 084171 3 Hadamard Jacques 1954 The Psychology of Invention in the Mathematical Field Dover ISBN 0 486 20107 4 Jeffery Graham 2005 The Creative College building a successful learning culture in the arts Trentham Books Johnson D M 1972 Systematic introduction to the psychology of thinking Harper amp Row Jullien F 2004 In Praise of Blandness Proceeding from Chinese Thought and Aesthetics Translated by Varsano Paula M Zone Books U S ISBN 1 890951 41 2 Jung Carl G 1981 The Collected Works of C G Jung Vol 8 The Structure and Dynamics of the Psyche Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 09774 7 Kanigel Robert 1992 The Man Who Knew Infinity A Life of the Genius Ramanujan Washington Square Press ISBN 0 671 75061 5 Kraft U 2005 Unleashing Creativity Scientific American Mind April 16 23 doi 10 1038 scientificamericanmind0405 16 Kolp P Lamme A Regnard Fr 2009 Rens J M ed Musique et creativite Orphee Apprenti NS 1 9 119 D 2009 11848 5 Lehrer Jonah 2012 Imagine How Creativity Works McLaren R B 1999 Dark Side of Creativity In Runco M A Pritzker S R eds Encyclopedia of Creativity Academic Press McCrae R R 1987 Creativity Divergent Thinking and Openness to Experience Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 52 6 1258 1265 doi 10 1037 0022 3514 52 6 1258 Michalko M 1998 Cracking Creativity The Secrets of Creative Genius Berkeley Calif Ten Speed Press ISBN 978 0 89815 913 4 National Academy of Engineering 2005 Educating the engineer of 2020 adapting engineering education to the new century National Academies Press ISBN 978 0 309 09649 2, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library, article, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games, mobile, phone, android, ios, apple, mobile phone, samsung, iphone, xiomi, xiaomi, redmi, honor, oppo, nokia, sonya, mi, pc, web, computer
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