Cuicui Sun
Central China Normal University
6 Papers
Cuicui Sun is an academic researcher from Central China Normal University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Creativity & Divergent thinking. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 6 publications.
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Papers
Boys benefit more from teacher support: Effects of perceived teacher support on primary students’ creative thinking
TL;DR: This paper explored the relationship between perceived teacher support and primary students' creative thinking as well as the mechanism underlying these associations and gender differences, and found that perceived teachers can be considered valid attachment figures for students and have a positive effect on improving primary students’ creative thinking.
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The Role of Creative Publicity in Different Periods of the COVID-19 Outbreak in China: Taking the Creative Publicity of Chinese Poetry as an Example
TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors explored the role of creative publicity by comparing the influence of creative and general publicity in different periods of the COVID-19 outbreak in China and found that creative publicity had a significant impact on individuals' emotional arousal while general publicity promoted individuals' behavioral regulation and willingness to actively disseminate information.
Are Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms and Avoidant Coping Inhibitory Factors? The Association Between Posttraumatic Growth and Quality of Life Among Low-Grade Gliomas Patients in China
TL;DR: Posttraumatic growth may help to improve the quality of life of LGGs patients, but PTSS and Avoidant Coping impeded the positive effect of PTG on QoL.
The Effect of Zhongyong Thinking on Remote Association Thinking: An EEG Study.
TL;DR: Investigating the effects of the two divergent thinking forms of zhongyong on performance levels on the Remote Associates Test found that participants in the IT condition demonstrated higher RAT scores than those in the ET condition, suggesting that the RAT and priming tasks shared the same neural mechanism.