Creative Cognition: Theory, Research, and Applications

  • CUSACK J
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Abstract

"Creative Cognition" combines original experiments with existing work in cognitive psychology to provide the first explicit account of the cognitive processes and structures that contribute to creative thinking and discovery. In separate chapters, the authors take up visualization, concept formation, categorization, memory retrieval, and problem solving. They describe novel experimental methods for studying creative cognitive processes under controlled laboratory conditions, along with techniques that can be used to generate many different types of inventions and concepts. Following a summary of previous approaches to creativity, the authors present a theoretical model of the creative process. They review research involving an innovative imagery recombination technique, developed by Finke, that clearly demonstrates that creative inventions can be induced in the laboratory. They then describe experiments in category learning that support the provocative claim that the factors constraining category formation similarly constrain imagination and illustrate the role of various memory processes and other strategies in creative problem solving—showing, for instance, the degree to which often mystifying notions such as incubation, intuition, and insight can be readily understood in light of such well-accepted cognitive processes as memory decay and spreading activation.

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APA

CUSACK, J. R. (1994). Creative Cognition: Theory, Research, and Applications. American Journal of Psychiatry, 151(5), 777–777. https://doi.org/10.1176/ajp.151.5.777

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