Interaction effect of response medium and working memory capacity on creative idea generation

被引:14
|
作者
Hao, Ning [1 ]
Yuan, Huan [1 ]
Cheng, Rui [1 ]
Wang, Qing [1 ]
Runco, Mark A. [2 ]
机构
[1] E China Normal Univ, Sch Psychol & Cognit Sci, Shanghai 200062, Peoples R China
[2] Amer Inst Behav Res & Technol, San Diego, CA USA
来源
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY | 2015年 / 6卷
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
creativity; creative idea generation; divergent thinking; working memory capacity; response medium; DIVERGENT THINKING; INDIVIDUAL-DIFFERENCES; SELECTIVE-RETENTION; BLIND-VARIATION; COGNITIVE LOAD; HEDONIC TONE; INTELLIGENCE; INCUBATION; INSIGHT; THOUGHT;
D O I
10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01582
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
This study aimed to examine the interaction effect of response medium (i.e., write down ideas and orally report ideas) and working memory capacity (WMC) on creative idea generation. Participants (N = 90) with higher or lower WMC were asked to solve Alternative Uses Task (AUT) problems in the condition of writing down or speaking out ideas. The results showed that fluency of AUT performance was higher in the writing than in the speaking condition. Additionally, participants with higher WMC performed better on AUT fluency than those with lower WMC in the writing condition, while they showed no difference in the speaking condition. Moreover, level of cognitive demand fully mediated the effect of response medium on AUT fluency. Theoretically, these findings indicated the importance of WMC in creative idea generation, which supported the controlled-attention theory of creativity. Practical implications and future directions were discussed.
引用
收藏
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Contextualised retrieval practice: the effect of context type and working memory capacity on word retention
    Ahoomanesh, Monireh
    Shahnazari, Mohammadtaghi
    Ketabi, Saeed
    LANGUAGE LEARNING JOURNAL, 2024,
  • [42] The Interaction of Approach-Alcohol Action Tendencies, Working Memory Capacity, and Current Task Goals Predicts the Inability to Regulate Drinking Behavior
    Sharbanee, Jason M.
    Stritzke, Werner G. K.
    Wiers, Reinout W.
    Young, Paul
    Rinck, Mike
    MacLeod, Colin
    PSYCHOLOGY OF ADDICTIVE BEHAVIORS, 2013, 27 (03) : 649 - 661
  • [43] The Effect of Working Memory Capacity on the Figurative Language Processing of Chinese Second Language Learners
    Duan, Xun
    Chai, Xingsan
    CHINESE LEXICAL SEMANTICS, CLSW 2023, PT I, 2024, 14514 : 426 - 439
  • [44] Word-Decoding Skill Interacts With Working Memory Capacity to Influence Inference Generation During Reading
    Hamilton, Stephen
    Freed, Erin
    Long, Debra L.
    READING RESEARCH QUARTERLY, 2016, 51 (04) : 391 - 402
  • [45] Working memory capacity and the risky-choice framing effect: A preregistered replication and extension of Corbin et al. (2010)
    Bogdanov, Boris
    Corbin, Jonathan
    Dobreva, Sabina
    Mcelroy, Todd
    Rachev, Nikolay R.
    JUDGMENT AND DECISION MAKING, 2023, 18
  • [46] The Effect of Metacognitive Intervention on the Listening Performance and Metacognitive Awareness of High- and Low-Working Memory Capacity EFL Learners
    Muhammadpour, Meysam
    Zafarghandi, Amir Mahdavi
    Tahriri, Abdorreza
    JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLINGUISTIC RESEARCH, 2024, 53 (05)
  • [47] Mindfulness and Emotion Regulation among Nursing Students: Investigating the Mediation Effect of Working Memory Capacity
    Dubert, Christy J.
    Schumacher, Autumn M.
    Locker, Lawrence, Jr.
    Gutierrez, Antonio P.
    Barnes, Vernon A.
    MINDFULNESS, 2016, 7 (05) : 1061 - 1070
  • [48] Individuals lower in working memory capacity are particularly vulnerable to anxiety's disruptive effect on performance
    Johnson, Dan R.
    Gronlund, Scott D.
    ANXIETY STRESS AND COPING, 2009, 22 (02) : 201 - 213
  • [49] Effect of cognitive load and working memory capacity on the efficiency of discovering better alternatives: A survival analysis
    Yuki Ninomiya
    Tomoyuki Iwata
    Hitoshi Terai
    Kazuhisa Miwa
    Memory & Cognition, 2024, 52 : 115 - 131
  • [50] Individual differences in working memory capacity and the Stroop effect: Do high spans block the words?
    Shipstead, Zach
    Broadway, James M.
    LEARNING AND INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES, 2013, 26 : 191 - 195