Abstract

Creativity is considered the ability to generate new ideas or behaviors, an ability that have diverse expressions in different human groups, such as painters and non-painters. Art major students require more creative activities than non-art students do. In this study, we plan to explore the figural creativity abilities of art major students and whether these students exhibited higher figural creativity scores and why their brain structure of gray matter are lower which may benefit from their professional training relative to non-art majors. Therefore, in this study, we use voxel-based morphometry (VBM) to identify different behavioral and brain mechanisms between art major students and non-art major students by using the figural Torrance Test of Creative Thinking. Our results showed that the TTCT-figural (TTCT-F) scores of art majors were higher than those of non-art majors. The TTCT-F score of art major students and practicing and study time have positive correlations which means art major’s figural creativity score benefit from there art professional training in some degree. Subsequently, the interaction analysis revealed that the TTCT-figural scores of art majors and non-majors exhibited significant correlations with the gray matter volumes (GMV) of the left anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and the left medial frontal gyrus (MFG). While the simple slope analysis showed that art majors, compared with non-art majors, exhibited a marginal significantly positive association with the left ACC and MFG, non-art majors exhibited a significantly negative association with the left ACC and MFG. Overall, our study revealed that people who major in artistic work are more likely to possess enhanced figural creative skills relative to non-artistic people. These results indicated that professional artistic programs or training may increase creativity skills via reorganized intercortical connections.

Highlights

  • The voxel-based morphometry (VBM) analysis results showed that figural creativity scores were related to gray matter volumes (GMV) of the left anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and medial frontal gyrus (MFG)

  • In the analysis of the brain, our results showed that the TTCT-figural scores of art majors have a marginal significant positive effect on the GMVs of the left ACC and MFG

  • The MFG may play a part crucial role in working memory during the manipulation of actively maintained information (Bunge and Zelazo, 2006; Woodward et al, 2006; DeYoung et al, 2010). These findings suggest that the reduced GMV in the MFG revealed in the present study might be associated with reduced inhibitory control, which may be associated with particular characteristics of higher trait creativity, such as challenge and risk taking

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Summary

Introduction

There have been many different theories of creativity until recently, and the general idea regarding creativity is that it refers to the generation of original, novel ideas through mental habits of thinking (Torrance, 1966, 1988; Guilford, 1967; Guilford et al, 1978; Ruscio et al, 1998; HowardJones et al, 2005; Chavez-Eakle et al, 2007; Gibson et al, 2009; Storm et al, 2011). Art Major’s Creativity: a VBM Study argued that creativity is certainly the most important and common of all human activities, being seen as an attribute for people to possess (Simonton, 2000). Many psychometric instruments have been used to develop tests of people’s creative abilities, among which, one of the most common ones is Torrance Test of Creative Thinking (Torrance, 1966)

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