An ERP study of passive creative conceptual expansion using a modified alternate uses task

Abstract A novel ERP paradigm was employed to investigate conceptual expansion, a central component of creative thinking. Participants were presented with word pairs, consisting of everyday objects and uses for these objects, which had to be judged based on the two defining criteria of creative prod...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brain research 2013-08, Vol.1527, p.189-198
Hauptverfasser: Kröger, Sören, Rutter, Barbara, Hill, Holger, Windmann, Sabine, Hermann, Christiane, Abraham, Anna
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container_start_page 189
container_title Brain research
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creator Kröger, Sören
Rutter, Barbara
Hill, Holger
Windmann, Sabine
Hermann, Christiane
Abraham, Anna
description Abstract A novel ERP paradigm was employed to investigate conceptual expansion, a central component of creative thinking. Participants were presented with word pairs, consisting of everyday objects and uses for these objects, which had to be judged based on the two defining criteria of creative products: unusualness and appropriateness. Three subject-determined trial types resulted from this judgement: high unusual and low appropriate (nonsensical uses), low unusual and high appropriate (common uses), and high unusual and high appropriate (creative uses). Word pairs of the creative uses type are held to passively induce conceptual expansion. The N400 component was not specifically modulated by conceptual expansion but was, instead, generally responsive as a function of unusualness or novelty of the stimuli (nonsense=creative>common). Explorative analyses in a later time window (500–900 ms) revealed that ERP activity in this phase indexes appropriateness (nonsense>creative=common). In the discussion of these findings with reference to the literature on semantic cognition, both components are proposed as indexing processes relevant to conceptual expansion as they are selectively involved in the encoding and integration of a newly established semantic connection between two previously unrelated concepts.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.brainres.2013.07.007
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Psychology</subject><subject>Humans</subject><subject>Magnetic Resonance Imaging - methods</subject><subject>Male</subject><subject>N400</subject><subject>Neurology</subject><subject>Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry</subject><subject>Psychology. 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subjects Adult
Alternate uses task
Behavioral psychophysiology
Biological and medical sciences
brain
Brain - physiology
Brain Mapping - methods
cognition
Conceptual expansion
Creativity
Divergent thinking
Electroencephalography
Electrophysiology
ERP
Evoked Potentials - physiology
Female
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Humans
Magnetic Resonance Imaging - methods
Male
N400
Neurology
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychology. Psychophysiology
Semantic cognition
Thinking - physiology
Young Adult
title An ERP study of passive creative conceptual expansion using a modified alternate uses task
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