Inspired by Distraction
University of California, Santa Barbara · Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences · +1 more institution
Abstract
Although anecdotes that creative thoughts often arise when one is engaged in an unrelated train of thought date back thousands of years, empirical research has not yet investigated this potentially critical source of inspiration. We used an incubation paradigm to assess whether performance on validated creativity problems (the Unusual Uses Task, or UUT) can be facilitated by engaging in either a demanding task or an undemanding task that maximizes mind wandering. Compared with engaging in a demanding task, rest, or no break, engaging in an undemanding task during an incubation period led to substantial improvements in performance on previously encountered problems. Critically, the context that improved…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 19.54
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 31
Authors
6- BBBenjamin BairdCorresponding
University of California, Santa Barbara
- JSJonathan Smallwood
Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences
- MDMichael D. Mrazek
University of California, Santa Barbara
- JWJulia W. Y. Kam
University of British Columbia
- MSMichael S. Franklin
University of California, Santa Barbara
Topics & keywords
- Distraction
- Creativity
- Psychology
- Task (project management)
- Mind-wandering
- Context (archaeology)
- Cognitive psychology
- Social psychology