Abstract
Increases in EEG alpha power during creative ideation are among the most consistent findings in the neuroscientific study of creativity, but existing studies did not focus on time-related changes of EEG alpha activity patterns during the process of creative ideation so far. Since several cognitive processes are involved in the generation of creative ideas, different EEG correlates may result as a function of time. In this study we addressed this crucial point. Forty-five participants worked on the “Alternative Uses Task” while the EEG was recorded and changes in task-related power (relative to rest) in the upper-frequency band (10–12 Hz) for three isochronous time intervals of the idea generation period were determined. Alpha power changes during idea generation followed a characteristic time course: we found a general increase of alpha power at the beginning of idea generation that was followed by a decrease and finally by a re-increase of alpha prior to responding that was most pronounced at parietal and temporal sites of the right hemisphere. Additionally, the production of more original ideas was accompanied by increasing hemispheric asymmetry (more alpha in the right than left hemisphere) with increasing duration of the idea generation period. The observed time course of brain activity may reflect the progression of different but well-known stages in the idea generation process: that is the initial retrieval of common and old ideas followed by the actual generation of novel and more creative ideas by overcoming typical responses through processes of mental simulation and imagination.
Highlights
Increases in EEG alpha power during creative ideation are among the most consistent findings in the neuroscientific study of creativity, but existing studies did not focus on time-related changes of EEG alpha activity patterns during the process of creative ideation so far
Regarding the time-course of creative ideation, a characteristic trend of task-related power (TRP) was observed: as depicted in Figure 2, comparatively strong alpha synchronization occurred in the first time interval of idea generation
The findings of this study suggest that the process of creative ideation is characterized by a distinctive pattern of task-related EEG alpha power changes as a function of time
Summary
Increases in EEG alpha power during creative ideation are among the most consistent findings in the neuroscientific study of creativity, but existing studies did not focus on time-related changes of EEG alpha activity patterns during the process of creative ideation so far. Since several cognitive processes are involved in the generation of creative ideas, different EEG correlates may result as a function of time. On the basis of these findings Fink and Benedek (2012) concluded that the observed alpha findings are among the most consistent findings in the neuroscientific study of creativity, and we might assume that the study of alpha power changes is a valuable and powerful tool to study brain activity patterns during the process of creative idea generation. More recent studies suggested that alpha synchronization may indicate a state of high internal processing demands that are characterized by “the absence of bottom-up processing (Ray and Cole, 1985; Cooper et al, 2003) and can be classified a pure form of top-down activity” (von Stein and Sarnthein, 2000, p.311) This top-down process may have an attentional control function leading to inhibition of task-irrelevant stimuli (Klimesch et al, 2007). Alpha synchronization is probably associated with selective and active cognitive processing (Sauseng et al, 2005)
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