Abstract

Although there exists increasing knowledge about brain correlates underlying creative ideation in general, the specific neurocognitive mechanisms implicated in different stages of the creative thinking process are still under-researched. Some recent EEG studies suggested that alpha power during creative ideation varies as a function of time, with the highest levels of alpha power after stimulus onset and at the end of the creative thinking process. The main aim of the present study was to replicate and extend this finding by applying an individual differences approach, and by investigating functional coupling between long distance cortical sites during the process of creative ideation. Eighty-six participants performed the Alternate Uses (AU) task during EEG assessment. Results revealed that more original people showed increased alpha power after stimulus onset and before finalizing the process of idea generation. This U-shaped alpha power pattern was accompanied by an early increase in functional communication between frontal and parietal-occipital sites during the creative thinking process, putatively indicating activation of top-down executive control processes. Participants with lower originality showed no significant time-related variation in alpha power and a delayed increase in long distance functional communication. These findings are in line with dual process models of creative ideation and support the idea that increased alpha power at the beginning of the creative ideation process may indicate more associative modes of thinking and memory processes, while the alpha increases at later stages may indicate executive control processes, associated with idea elaboration/evaluation.

Highlights

  • Generating original, useful, and innovative ideas is one of the most important and fascinating cognitive skills, relevant in many different contexts and situations in daily life

  • As an important extension of available literature, this study investigated functional coupling between long distance cortical sites during the process of creative ideation

  • The process of creative ideation followed a characteristic time-course of task-related alpha power changes

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Summary

Introduction

Generating original, useful, and innovative ideas is one of the most important and fascinating cognitive skills, relevant in many different contexts and situations in daily life (see, e.g., Beaty, 2015; Boccia, Piccardi, Palermo, Nori, & Palmiero, 2015; Fink et al, 2017; Fink, Bay, et al, 2018; Lopata, Nowicki, & Joanisse, 2017; Papousek, Weiss, et al, 2017; Pinho, Ullen, Castelo-Branco, Fransson, & de Manzano, 2016). Gilhooly, Fioratou, Anthony, and Wynn (2007) found by means of an overt verbal Alternate Uses (AU; Guilford, 1967) task that initial ideas were more often based on memory retrieval, while later ideas were typically based on more complex processes such as imagination and inhibition (see Cheng, Hu, Jia, & Runco, 2016; Silvia, Nusbaum, & Beaty, 2017) This is congruent with the assumption that at later stages of the creative thinking process, prepotent, obvious, and common ideas are inhibited and memory content is integrated in the generation of new ideas, which presumably leads to more creative outcomes (Beaty & Silvia, 2012; Benedek, Jauk, et al, 2014; Benedek et al, 2018; Cheng et al, 2016; Rominger, Papousek, Weiss, et al, 2018; Wang, Hao, Ku, Grabner, & Fink, 2017; Zabelina, Robinson, Council, & Bresin, 2012)

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