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Gregory T. Boldt; James C. Kaufman – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2025
Most research on the creative process has focused on idea generation, and the prevalence and influence of many other creative subprocesses remain poorly understood. To clarify different subprocesses' respective roles in creative work, this study investigated their frequencies and associations with creativity-related personal characteristics and…
Descriptors: Creativity, Cognitive Processes, Undergraduate Students, Student Characteristics
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Kailiang Chen; Juanjuan Chen; Yuwei Sun; Guorui Yan – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2025
Understanding and supporting pre-service teachers' creativity in collaborative instructional design has gained increasing attention. To design novel and effective learning experiences or activities for students, they need to build empathy with students, that is, understanding students' learning needs. This study aimed to (1) explore the patterns…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Empathy, Cognitive Processes, Instructional Design
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Xinyao Xiao; Jian Wang; Yanyan Shu; Junying Tan – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2024
Multisensory environments rich in modal integration provide cues from various sensory modalities including visually, auditorily, and tactilely. Such modal integration plays a crucial role in cognitive processing, specifically in fostering creativity. Numerous studies highlight that emotional coherence through cross-modal affective integration…
Descriptors: Creativity, Multisensory Learning, Audiovisual Aids, Sensory Experience
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Zhou, Zhijin; Zhang, Hongpo; Li, Mingzhu; Sun, Cuicui; Luo, Hualin – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2021
Zhongyong thinking is a common approach adopted by Chinese people to solve problems encountered in life and work. Based on the four modes of zhongyong thinking proposed by Pang (Social Sciences in China, 1, 1980, 75), this study chooses the "neither A nor B" form, which represents the "mean" ([Chinese character omitted])…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Thinking Skills, Problem Solving, Priming
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Miller, Angie L.; Dumford, Amber D. – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2016
This paper explores whether or not students in higher education settings are using creative cognitive processes, how these processes are related to deep approaches to learning, and in what types of settings and students these processes are most prevalent. Data collected from 8,724 students at 17 institutions participating in the 2010 National…
Descriptors: Creativity, Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, College Students
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Kohn, Nicholas; Smith, Steven M. – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2009
Incubation has long been proposed as a mechanism in creative problem solving (Wallas, 1926). A new trial-by-trial method for observing incubation effects was used to compare the forgetting fixation hypothesis with the conscious work hypothesis. Two experiments examined the effects of incubation on initially unsolved Remote Associates Test (RAT)…
Descriptors: Creativity, Problem Solving, Attention, Cognitive Processes
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Cunningham, J. Barton; MacGregor, James N.; Gibb, Jenny; Haar, Jarrod – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2009
A central question in creativity concerns how insightful ideas emerge. Anecdotal examples of insightful scientific and technical discoveries include Goodyear's discovery of the vulcanization of rubber, and Mendeleev's realization that there may be gaps as he tried to arrange the elements into the Periodic Table. Although most people would regard…
Descriptors: Creativity, Problem Solving, Cognitive Processes, Classification
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Kozbelt, Aaron; Durmysheva, Yana – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2007
Participants imagined, drew, and wrote about novel alien creatures (cf. Ward, 1994). Judges rated the creativity of the drawings alone, paragraphs alone, or drawings and paragraphs together. Much prior research has examined how participants rely on available exemplars and categorical knowledge in this task; here we focus on understanding why some…
Descriptors: Creativity, Freehand Drawing, Task Analysis, Correlation
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Charyton, Christine; Basham, Kimberly M.; Elliott, John O. – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2008
The purpose of the research was to investigate gender similarities and differences in general creativity constructs with their preferences for creative persons. Data were collected from 247 participants (87 engineering, 24 psychology students with a psychology major, 51 psychology students with a major other than psychology, 30 English, and 55…
Descriptors: Creativity, Psychology, Males, Gender Differences
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Blair, Cassie S.; Mumford, Michael D. – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2007
Idea evaluation has, in recent years, received more attention as a critical component of creative thought. One key influence on how people evaluate new ideas may be found in the standards, or attributes, people look for in appraising ideas. The intent of the present study was to examine the influence of different attributes on people's willingness…
Descriptors: College Students, Evaluation Criteria, Creativity, Thinking Skills
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Guastello, Stephen J.; Guastello, Denise D.; Hanson, Casey A. – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2004
The study addressed two findings in the creativity literature that show, on the one hand, that bipolar disorder and other clinical dysfunctions are overrepresented among eminently creative people, and that positive affect is positively associated with creativity. The central hypothesis of the study was that emotional intelligence could be an…
Descriptors: Emotional Intelligence, Creativity, Cognitive Style, Creative Thinking
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Scott, Ginamarie; Leritz, Lyle E.; Mumford, Michael D. – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2004
Prior meta-analytic studies have provided evidence for the effectiveness of creativity training. In the present study, 156 training programs were obtained and a content analysis was used to appraise these programs with respect to: a) cognitive processes, b) training techniques, c) media, and d) types of practice exercises. A cluster analysis was…
Descriptors: Creativity, Program Effectiveness, Multivariate Analysis, Content Analysis