Title: Background Work on Creativity
1Background Work on Creativity
2Creativity as a Neglected Research Topic
- J. P. Guilford (1950) in his APA presidential
address, challenged psychologists to address what
he found to be neglected but extremely important
attribute Creativity. He reported less than
two-tenths of one percent of the entries in
Psychological Abstracts up to 1950 focused on
creativity. - R. J. Sternberg T. Lubart (1996) analyzed the
no. of creativity references in Psychological
Abstracts from 1975 to 1994 and found that only
one-half of one percent of the articles concerned
creativity.
3Mystical Approaches
- The creative person was seen as an empty vessel
that a divine being filled with inspiration - Creativity is something that just doesnt lend
itself to scientific study, because it si a more
spiritual process.
4Pragmatic Approaches
- This approach concerned primarily with developing
creativity, secondarily with understanding it,
but almost not at all with testing the validity
of their ideas about it. - De Bonos lateral thinking skills
- Osborns synectics
- Adams Von Oechs role play approaches as
explorer, artist, judge and warrior to construct
a series of false beliefs that interfere with or
challenge creativity functioning in order to
foster creativity productivity.
5Psychodynamic Approach (1)
- Psychodynamic approach can be considered the
first of the major twentieth-century theoretical
approaches to the study of creativity. These
approaches relied on case studies of eminent
creators. - These approaches has been criticized historically
because of the difficulty of measuring proposed
theoretical constructs. - Representative figures Freud, Kubie
- Compensation process Creative work as a way to
express their unconscious wishes in a publicly
acceptable fashion. These unconscious wishes may
concern power, riches, fame, honor, or love.
6Psychodynamic Approach (2)
- Adaptive regression elaboration process
Adaptive regression is the primary process
indicating intrusion of unmodulated thought in
consciousness. Unmodulated thought can occur
during active problem solving, but often occur
during sleep, introxication from drugs,
fantasies, or daydreams, or psychoses.
Elaboration, the secondary process, refers to the
reworking and transformation of primary process
material through reality-oriented, ego-controlled
thinking. - Adaptive regression and elaboration process
occurs in the stage of preconscious, which falls
between conscious reality and the encrypted
unconscious, is the true source of creativity.
7Psychometric Approaches (1)
- These approaches use tests or scales for
measuring creativity - Guilford (1950) used Unusual Uses Test for
measuring divergent thinking - Torrance (1974) developed the Torrance Tests of
Creative Thinking that consist of several simple
verbal and figural tasks involving divergent
thinking plus other problem-solving skills. The
tests can scored for fluency, flexibility,
originality and elaboration. Subtests of the
Torrance battery includes asking questions,
product improvement, unusual uses, circles.
8Psychometric Approaches (2)
- Some psychologists, such as Cox, Terman, Merrill,
found high creative persons usual have high IQ by
examining bio-data. - Cox in his research concludes that (creative
persons are) high but not highest in
intelligence, combined with the greatest degree
of persistent, will achieve greater eminence that
the highest degree of intelligence with somewhat
less persistence.
9Psychometric Approaches (3)
- Three basic findings concerning conventional
conceptions of intelligence as measured by IQ and
creativity are generally agreed on - Creative people tend to show above average IQs,
often above 120. - Above an IQ of 120, IQ does not seem to matter as
much to creativity as it does below 120 - The correlation between IQ and creativity is
variable, usually ranging from weak to moderate
10Psychometric Approaches (4)
- Positive side of psychometric approaches
- The tests facilitated research by providing
brief, easy to administer - Research was now possible with ordinary people
- Negative side of psychometric approaches
- Paper-and-pencil tests are trivial, inadequate
measures of creativity - Critics suggested that neither fluency,
flexibility, originality, nor elaboration scores
captured the concept of creativity. Other
possibilities include using the social consensus
of judges. - Some researchers rejected the assumption that
noneminent samples could shed light on eminent
levels of creativity
11Cognitive Approaches
- These approaches seek to understand the mental
representations and processes underlying creative
thought - Weiberg (1986, 1988, 1993, 1999) has proposed
that creativity involves essentially ordinary
cognitive processes (ex. analogical transfer)
yielding extraordinary products. - Finke, Ward, and Smith (1992) have proposed the
Gene-plore model - A generative phase an individual constructs
mental representations referred to as
pre-inventive structures, which have properties
promoting creative discoveries. - An exploratory phase these properties are used
to come up with creative ideas. A number of
mental processes may enter into these phases of
creative invention, such as retrieval,
association, synthesis, transformation,
analogical transfer, and categorical reduction.
12Social-personality Approaches (1)
- These approaches have focused on personality
variables, motivational variables, and
socio-cultural environment as source of
creativity. - Representative figures Amabile, Barron, Eysenck,
Gough, MacKinnon - Relevant personality traits concerning
personality include independence of judgment,
self-confidence, attraction to complexity,
aesthetic orientation, and risk taking.
13Social-personality Approaches (2)
- Motivation factors concerning creativity include
intrinsic motivation, need for order, need for
achievement - Social environment factors concerning creativity
include cultural diversity, war, availability of
role models, availability of resources, and
number of competitors in a domain
14Evolutional Approaches
- D. Cample (1960) suggested the same mechanisms
that have been applied to the study of the
evolution of organism could be applied to the
evolution of (creative) ideas. - The idea underlying this approach is that there
are two basic steps in the generation and
propagation of creative ideas - The first step is blind variation
- The second step is selective retention
- Sternberg (1997) argued that good creators may or
may not have more ideas than other people but
they have better ideas.
15Confluence Approaches (1)
- These approaches hypothesized that multiple
components must converge for creativity to occur. - (Amabile) People implicit theory contain
combination of cognitive and personality
elements, such as connect ideas, sees
similarities and differences, has flexibility,
has aesthetic taste, is unorthodox, is
motivated, is inquisitive, and questions
societal norms. - (Gruber) Evolving systems model hypothesized that
a persons knowledge, purpose, and affect grow
over time, amplify deviations that an individual
encounters, and lead to creative products.
16Confluence Approaches (2)
- (Csikszentmihalyi) has taken a different System
approach and highlights the interaction of the
individual, domain, and field. An individual
draws on information in a domain and transforms
or extends it via cognitive processes,
personality traits, and motivation. The field,
consisting of people who control or influence a
domain, evaluates and selects new ideas. The
domain, a culturally defined symbol system,
preserves and transmits creative products to
other individuals and future generations.
17Confluence Approaches (3)
- (Gardner) Multiple Intelligence Framework
indicates most greatest creative persons actually
had strengths in more than one intelligence and
that they had notably weakness in others. First,
they tended to have a matrix of support at the
time of their creative breakthroughs. Second,
they tended to drive a Faustian bargain whereby
they gave up many of the pleasures people
typically enjoy in life in order to attain
extraordinary success in their careers. - Sigmund Freud (intrapersonal), Albert Einstein
(logical-mathematical), Pablo Picasso (spatial),
Igor Stravinsky (musical), T. S. Eliot
(linguistic), Martha Graham (bodily-kinesthetic),
Mohandas Gandhi (interpersonal) - (Sternberg) Investment Theory of Investment
18The Investment Theory of Creativity as a Decision
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19What is Investment Theory of Creativity?
- The theory concerns the decision to be creative
and is based on the notion that creative people
decide to buy low and sell high in the world of
ideas --- that is, they generate ideas that tend
to defy the crowd (buy low) and then, when they
have persuaded many people, they sell high,
meaning they move on to the next unpopular idea.
20Experimental Materials for Research in Investment
Theory
- Research within the framework has used tasks to
experiment and to support the model - Writing short stories using unusual titles
- Drawing pictures with unusual themes
- Devising creative advertisements for boring
products - Solving unusual scientific problems
21Six Distinct but Interrelated Resources Required
for Creativity (1)
- Intellectual abilities
- The creative skill to see problems in new ways
and escape the bounds of conventional thinking - The analytic skill to recognize which of ones
ideas are worth pursuing and which are not - The practical-contextual skill to know how to
persuade others of the value of ones ideas - Knowledge
- One needs to decide to use ones past knowledge,
but also decide to let the knowledge become a
hindrance rather than a help. - Styles of thinking
- A legislative style is particularly important for
creativity
22Six Distinct but Interrelated Resources Required
for Creativity (2)
- Personality
- Willingness to overcome obstacles, willingness to
take sensible risks, willingness to tolerate
ambiguity, and self-efficacy - Motivation
- Intrinsic, and task-oriented motivation is
essential to creativity - Environment
- Supportive environment for crowd-defying ideas
23Hypothesis of Confluence of Six Components
- There may be thresholds for some components below
which creativity is not possible regardless of
the levels of other components - Partial compensation may occur in which a
strength on one component counteracts a weakness
on another component - Interactions may occur between components, such
as intelligence and motivation, in which high
levels on both components could multiplicatively
enhance creativity
24Developing Creativity as a Decision (1)
- Redefine problems
- Question and analyze assumptions
- Do not assume that creative ideas sell
themselves Sell them - Encourage idea generation
- Recognize that knowledge is a double-edged sward
and act accordingly - Encourage children to identify and surmount
obstacles
25Developing Creativity as a Decision (2)
- Encourage sensible risk-taking
- Encourage tolerance of ambiguity
- Help children build self-efficacy
- Help children find what they love to do
- Teach children the importance of delaying
gratification - Role-model creativity
- Cross-fertilize ideas
26Developing Creativity as a Decision (3)
- Allow time for creative thinking
- Instruct and assess for creativity
- Reward creativity
- Allow mistakes
- Take responsibility for both successes and
failures - Encourage creative collaboration
- Imagine things from others points of view
- Maximize person-environment fit
27The Propulsion Theory of Creative Contribution
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28Views of Creative Contributions (1)
- Creative contribution as paradigm shift
- Kuhn (1970) distinguished between normal and
revolutionary science - Gardners distinguish five types of creative
contributions - Solving a well-defined problem
- Devising an encompassing theory
- Creating a frozen work
- Performing a ritualized work
- Rendering a high-stakes performance
29Views of Creative Contributions (2)
- Maslow (1967) distinguish two types of creative
contributions - Primary creativity is the kind of a person uses
to become self-actualized - Secondary creativity is the kind that leads to
creative achievements typically recognized by a
field
30Eight Types of Creative Contribution
- Contributions that accept current paradigm
- Replication
- Redefinition
- Forward incrementation
- Advance forward incrementation
- Contributions that reject current paradigm and
attempt to replace them - Redirection
- Reconstruction / redirection
- Reinitiation
- Contributions that merge disparate current
paradigms - Integration
31Replication (1)
- Replications are important because they can help
either to establish the validity or invalidity of
contributions, or the utility or lack of utility
of approaches
32Replication (2)
- Example
- Jensen (1982) and others argued that correlations
between scores on choice reaction-time tests and
scores on intelligence tests suggest that
individual differences in human intelligence
could be traced to individual differences in
velocity of neural condition. However, such
interpretation of results were somewhat
speculative. - Venon and Mori (1992) tested and seemingly
confirmed that Jensens hypothesis. They
developed a paradigm whereby they could measures
speed of neural condition in the arm. They found
that neural conduction velocity did indeed
predict scores on conventional tests of
intelligence. However, Wickett Vernon (1994)
failed to replicate the study.
33Redefinition (1)
- Work of redefinition type is judged to be
creative to the extent that redefinition of the
field is different from the earlier definition
(novelty) and to the extent that the redefinition
is judged to be plausible or correct (quality)
34Redefinition (2)
- Example
- Spearman (1904, 1927) who invented factor
analysis and used this technique to argue that
underlying performance on all tests of mental
abilities is a general factor, which he labeled
g. - Thomson (1939) proposed that although Spearman
was correct in positing a general factor
underlying performance on mental tests, he was
incorrect in his interpretation of it. According
to Thomson, the general factor actually
represents the working of multitudinous bonds.
These bonds are all alleged to be those mental
processes common to performance on all mental
tests. He proposed to change not the empirical
status of work on intelligence and argued that
the field was not where Spearman and others
thought it to be.
35Forward Incrementation (1)
- Forward incrementation represents the most common
type of creative contribution. It occurs when a
piece of work takes the field at the point where
it is and moves it forward from that point in the
space of contributions in the direction it is
already going.
36Forward Incrementation (2)
- For example
- After the initial groundbreaking study of
Festinger and Carlsmith (1959) on cognitive
dissonance, huge numbers of follow-up studies
were done on phenomena of cognitive dissonance
and cognitive consistency. - Most studies published in scientific journals can
be characterized as forward incrementation
37Advance Forward Incrementation (1)
- An advance forward incrementation is a work whose
potential typically is not realized at its
premiere, yet is later recognized as a step along
the historical path of a genre, and then seen as
a work ahead of its time.
38Advance Forward Incrementation (2)
- Example
- Royer (1971) published an article that was an
information-processing analysis of the
digit-symbol task on the Wechsler Adult
Intelligence Scale (WAIS). In the article, Royer
showed hoe information-processing analysis could
be used to decompose performance on the task and
understand the elementary information processes
underlying the performance. Royers work
forshadowed the later work of Hunt and Sternberg,
but his work went largely unnoticed.
39Redirection (1)
- Redirection involves accepting the field where it
is at a given time but attempting to move it in a
new direction. Work of this type is creative to
the extent that it moves a field in a direction
(novelty) and to the extent that this direction
is seen as desirable for research (quality)
40Redirection (2)
- Example
- The pioneering Hunt, Frost, and Lunneborg (1973)
article mentioned earlier suggested that
researchers of intelligence use
cognitive-psychological paradigms to study
intelligence. The basic idea was to correlate
scores on cognitive tasks (such as lexical
access) with scores on psychometric tests. - Sternberg (1977) used cognitive techniques
different from that suggested by Hunt. In
particular, he suggested that complex cognitive
tasks (such as analogies classifications high
levels of intelligent thought) be used instead of
simple cognitive tasks and that the goal should
be decomposed information processing on these
tasks into its elementary information-processing
components.
41Reconstruction (1)
- The creators suggests that the field should move
backward to a previous point but from there move
in a direction divergent from that it had taken.
42Reconstruction (2)
- Example
- B. F. Skinner (1972) analysis of creativity
represents an example of reconstruction. Skinner
apparently was perturbed that the behavioristic
principles that he and his colleagues believed
applied to all behavior. The 1972 paper was, in
large part, an argument that the field of
creativity had lost its foundations, and that it
needed to return to the kinds of behavioristic
analyses that Skinner believed he and others had
shown could account for creative behavior.
43Reinitiation (1)
- In reinitiation, a contributor suggests that a
field or subfield has reached an undesirable
point or has exhausted itself moving in the
direction in which it is moving. But rather than
suggesting that the field or subfield move in a
different direction from where it is. This form
of creative contribution represents a major
paradigm shift.
44Reinitiation (2)
- Example
- Spearman (1904) reinvented the filed of
intelligence theory and research by his invention
of factor analysis and by proposing his
two-factor theory based on his factor-analytic
results. Spearmans contribution was put
theorizing about intelligence on a firm
quantitative footing. - Binet Simon (1916) reinvented the field of
intelligence measurement. Whereas Galton (1883)
has proposed that intelligence should be
understood in terms of simple psychological
processes, Binet and Simon proposed that
intelligence should be understood in terms of
higher-order processes of judgment. For the most
part, the measurements of intelligence today are
still based on this notion of Binet and Simon.
45Integration (1)
- The creator puts together two types of ideas
previously seen as unrelated or even as opposed.
46Integration (2)
- Example
- Bob Silvers (1997) tasks George Seurats
pointillist technique of using many small dots to
form a larger work and combines it with the field
photography.
47General Issues
- Creative contributions can vary in novelty and
quality. - Types of creative contributions do not
immediately translate into levels of creative
contributions - What is viewed as creative will depend on the
match between what an individual has to offer and
what the context is willing to accept and value.
48Understand Creativity-related Phenomena via the
Propulsion Model (1)
- The mode suggests that positive or negative
reactions to a given contribution are likely to
vary with the type of creativity evinced in a
given creative contribution. - The propulsion model helps psychologists better
understand the nature of the relation between
creativity and leadership. - The propulsion model helps address the question
of whether programs based on artificial
intelligence are creative.
49Understand Creativity-related Phenomena via the
Propulsion Model (2)
- The propulsion model may be relevant to the
long-standing issue of the extent to which
creativity is domain-specific or domain-general.
It is speculative that the ability to do
reasonably successful forward incrementations may
be largely domain-general and may even be highly
correlated with scores on tests of conventional
(analytic) abilities. However, the ability to
perform a reinitiation may be quite a bit more
domain-specific, requiring a sense or even
feeding for a field that goes well beyond the
kinds of more generalized analytical abilities.