The creative cliff illusion.
Brian J. Lucas,Loran F. Nordgren +1 more
TL;DR: The authors found that people's creativity on aggregate remained constant or improved across an ideation session, but people's beliefs did not match this reality, and they referred to this misprediction as the creative cliff illusion.
read more
Abstract: Across eight studies, we tested whether people understand the time course of their own creativity. Prior literature finds that creativity tends to improve across an ideation session. Here we compared people's beliefs against their actual creative performance. Consistent with prior research, we found that people's creativity, on aggregate, remained constant or improved across an ideation session. However, people's beliefs did not match this reality. We consistently found that people expected their creativity to decline over time. We refer to this misprediction as the creative cliff illusion. Study 1 found initial evidence of this effect across an ideation task. We found further evidence in a sample with high domain-relevant knowledge (study 2), when creativity judgments were elicited retrospectively (study 3), and across a multiday study (study 5). We theorized the effect occurs because people mistakenly associate creativity (the novelty and usefulness of an idea) with idea production (the ability to generate an idea). Study 4 found evidence consistent with this mechanism. The creative cliff illusion was attenuated among those with high levels of everyday creative experience (study 6) and after a knowledge intervention that increased awareness of the effect (study 7). Demonstrating the impact of creativity beliefs on downstream performance, study 8 found that declining creativity beliefs negatively influenced task persistence and creative performance, suggesting that people underinvest in ideation. This research contributes to work on prediction in the creative domain and demonstrates the importance of understanding creativity beliefs for predicting creative performance.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
A systematic framework of creative metacognition.
Izabela Lebuda,Mathias Benedek +1 more
TL;DR: In this article , a systematic framework of creative metacognition (CMC) is proposed, which consists of two dynamic components (monitoring and control) and a more static component (metacognitive knowledge) subsuming metacognitive processes applying to the level of task, performance, and responses.
66
Conceptual expansion via novel metaphor processing: An ERP replication and extension study examining individual differences in creativity.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors replicated the results of a previous study on creative cognition and examined individual differences in creativity by measuring brain activity patterns in relation to the processing of novel metaphors.
26
Functional brain activation patterns of creative metacognitive monitoring
Christian Rominger,Mathias Benedek,Izabela Lebuda,Corinna M. Perchtold-Stefan,Andreas Schwerdtfeger,Ilona Papousek,Andreas Fink +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper , a generalized linear mixed effects model was applied to investigate effects of creative metacognitive monitoring and creative potential on EEG activity in the alpha band at idea and person level, and participants with higher monitoring skills and higher creative potential showed stronger alpha power decreases at parietal/occipital sites during creative idea generation and evaluation.
26
Artificial intelligence as a tool for creativity
Zorana Ivčević,Mike Grandinetti +1 more
TL;DR: This article explores AI's potential to augment human creativity through co-creation, examining its use across four levels of creativity: mini-c, little-c, Pro-C, and Big-C, and discusses future research directions for leveraging AI as a creative tool.
23
References
•Book
Creativity: Flow and the Psychology of Discovery and Invention
Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi
- 01 Jun 1996
TL;DR: Csikszentmihalyi as mentioned in this paper used 100 interviews with exceptional people, from biologists and physicists to politicians and business leaders, poets and artists, as well as his 30 years of research on the subject to explore the creative process.
7.3K
The nature of human intelligence.
TL;DR: There is a lot of books, user manual, or guidebook that related to The Nature Of Human Intelligence PDF, such as : classical mechanics upadhyaya bond more third papers in non verbal reasoning 9 10 years fiesta mk4 manual a visit of charity origami insects dover origami papercraft robert j lang author powerone bdsm big magic creative living beyond fear the weaver of tomorrow and dawn strider two stories calculus finney demana waits kennedy 3rd edition mathematical models in population biology and epidemiology texts in applied mathematics as discussed by the authors.
6.5K
The associative basis of the creative process.
TL;DR: An associative interpretation of the process of creative thinking is presented and three ways in which creative solutions may be achieved are indicated—serendipity, similarity, and mediation.
Creative Self-Efficacy: Its Potential Antecedents and Relationship to Creative Performance
Pamela Tierney,Steven M. Farmer +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, a new construct, creative self-efficacy, tapping employees' belief that they can be creative in their work roles, was tested using data from two different firms.
2.3K