INTELLIGENCE, THINKING, AND PERSONALITY - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 24
About This Presentation
Title:

INTELLIGENCE, THINKING, AND PERSONALITY

Description:

... seven days a week with few holidays, intelligent, introverted, self-sufficient. ... Johnson-Laird suggests the following working definition of creativity: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:150
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 25
Provided by: biolo86
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: INTELLIGENCE, THINKING, AND PERSONALITY


1
INTELLIGENCE, THINKING, AND PERSONALITY
  • CREATIVITY

2
CREATIVITY THE FOUR P's
  • Creative People
  • Creative Processes
  • Creative Products
  • Creative Places (or the Persuasive Powers of
    Creative People)

3
A CRUCIAL QUESTION IN THE STUDY OF CREATIVITY
  • Can there be a unified account of creativity in
    the arts and in mathematics and the sciences?

4
APPROACHES TO THE STUDY OF CREATIVITY
  • Psychometric
  • Psychometric Profiles of Creative People
  • Tests for Creativity
  • Biographic/Autobiographic
  • Computational Modelling of Creative Processes
  • Psychological Experiments

5
PSYCHOMETRIC PROFILES
  • Roe (1952) - North American scientists
  • The typical scientist was
  • first-born son of WASP (white anglo-saxon
    protestant) parents, isolated at school
  • married late, worked long hours - often seven
    days a week with few holidays, intelligent,
    introverted, self-sufficient.
  • social scientists were more extrovert, more
    aggressive, and more prone to get divorced than
    physical and biological scientists.

6
PSYCHOMETRIC PROFILES
  • Drevdahl and Cattell (1958) - North American
    artists and writers
  • similar profiles, though, not surprisingly, the
    artists were found to be more sensitive, and to
    have more inner tension, than the scientists.

7
OTHER TRAITS IDENTIFIED IN CREATIVE PEOPLE
  • The ability to find appropriate problems (Getzels
    Csikszentmihalyi,1976).
  • The ability to defer judgement (MacKinnon, 1962).
  • Desire for originality
  • Failure to conform to social pressure (self
    sufficiency)
  • Tolerance of ambiguity
  • Legislative (rule creating), rather than an
    executive (rule following), or judicial (rule
    assessing),mental self-government (Sternberg,
    1988).
  • Deep commitment (not least because it is needed
    to acquire sufficient domain specific knowledge).

8
TESTS FOR CREATIVITY?
  • Guilford convergent vs. divergent thinking (e.g.
    uses of a brick test for divergent thinking)
  • Tests either failed to correlate with creative
    achievement
  • OR also correlated with IQ tests

9
LATER TESTS THAT HAVE MET WITH MORE SUCCESS
  • Torrance Tests of Creative Thinking (TTCT,
    Torrance, 1966)
  • correlations of 0.4 to 0.6 with later measures of
    creative achievement
  • Symbol Equivalence test (F. Barron)
  • people have to produce metaphors (symbolically
    equivalent images) for images described to them
    verbally (e.g. leaves being blown in the wind).
  • responses are scored for both acceptability and
    originality.

10
WALLIS'S (1928) FOUR STAGE THEORY
  • Based largely on autobiographic reports (e.g.
    Helmholtz Poincaré)
  • Preparation
  • Incubation
  • Inspiration
  • Verification

11
WALLIS'S (1928) FOUR STAGE THEORY
  • Some experimental evidence from the 1930s
    (Patrick) for stages apart from incubation
  • Based on think aloud protocols
  • Murray and Denny (1969) some evidence that low
    ability subjects helped by a distractor task
    (incubation)

12
DOES INCUBATION INVOLVE UNCONSCIOUS PROBLEM
SOLVING
  • Need to distinguish not working on a problem at
    a desk from an account of the mechanisms
    allegedly at work.
  • Perkins suggests that people do think about
    problems when working at other things, and that
    incubation is merely physical refreshment,
    fruitful forgetting, losing commitment to an
    ineffective approach, and noticing clues in the
    environment (Perkins, 1981 57).
  • Combination and recombination of ideas (which
    e.g. Poincaré believed happened unconsciously)
    is, nevertheless, important, though not every
    such recombination is useful. We need an account
    of which ones are.

13
ENVIRONMENTS FOR CREATIVITY
  • Good working conditions helpful, but environment
    more generally is important.
  • Csikszentmihalyi (1988) three main forces shape
    creative achievement
  • The creative individual
  • A social field - determines which new ideas are
    worth retaining
  • A stable cultural domain - preserves ideas
    selected by the field.

14
ENVIRONMENTS FOR CREATIVITY (cont.)
  • In the arts, ideas about what is (or, rather was,
    creative) can be revised long after the artist is
    dead. Botticelli's late 15th century paintings
    have been more highly valued since their
    reassessment by Ruskin and other mid 19th century
    art critics.
  • Social field/cultural domain likened to natural
    selection in the theory of evolution.
  • Thus, problem finding is important. Problem
    finding produces more, and more extreme,
    variations from current norms for the field to
    operate on.

15
JOHNSON-LAIRD'S WORKING DEFINITION OF CREATIVITY
  • Johnson-Laird suggests the following working
    definition of creativity
  • The results of a creative process must be new, at
    least for the creative person, though they are
    produced from existing elements.
  • The results must not be produced by recall from
    memory, rote computation, or any other simple
    deterministic process.
  • The results must satisfy a set of criteria.

16
POSSIBLE SOURCES OF INDETERMINISM ACCORDING TO
JOHNSON-LAIRD
  • According to Johnson-Laird, it is possible to
    remain agnostic about the source of
    nondeterminism in creative thinking.
  • Nevertheless, he does suggest some possibilities.

17
POSSIBLE SOURCES OF INDETERMINISM ACCORDING TO
JOHNSON-LAIRD
  • One possibility is that creative processes appear
    nondeterministic at the level of analysis
    appropriate to a theory of creativity merely
    because of our ignorance of what causes people to
    make the choices they do.
  • Another is that the human mind has a facility for
    making genuinely arbitrary choices.
  • A third, rather far-fetched, possibility is that
    the nondeterminism arises from quantum-level
    processes (an idea first suggested by the English
    physicist Arthur Eddington, 1882-1944, and
    recently revisited by Roger Penrose, 1989, 1994).

18
POSSIBLE ALGORITHMS FOR CREATIVITY ACCORDING TO
JOHNSON-LAIRD
  • (1) Neo-Darwinian
  • combines old elements in a random way, thus
    introducing the element of indeterminism. The
    results of the combinations are then subjected to
    a selection process in which only the viable (or
    promising) combinations are retained. As in
    natural selection, many iterations of this
    procedure may be needed before a combination that
    is really creative emerges.

19
POSSIBLE ALGORITHMS FOR CREATIVITY ACCORDING TO
JOHNSON-LAIRD
  • (2) Neo-Lamarckian
  • old elements are initially combined not at
    random, but subject to appropriate constraints.
    If several viable combinations emerge, there may
    be a random process of selection among them at a
    second stage to introduce an element of
    indeterminism. If the constraints at the first
    stage are strong enough, no iteration is
    required.

20
POSSIBLE ALGORITHMS FOR CREATIVITY ACCORDING TO
JOHNSON-LAIRD
  • (3) Mixed
  • combines neo-Darwinian and neo-Lamarckian
    aspects.

21
APPLICATION TO JAZZ
  • (A) Jazz chord sequences
  • Neo-Darwinian algorithm - creates many
    possibilities outside the context of performance
    and selects between them.
  • (B) Jazz bass lines
  • Neo-Lamarkian algorithm - creates just one
    possibility (possibly with arbitrary choices in
    context of improvisation)

22
PROBLEMS FOR JOHNSON-LAIRD
  • Doesn't account for the creation of new genres,
    but only for creativity within a genre (e.g.
    12-bar blues)
  • Doesn't account for what makes one chord
    sequences or bass line better (or more
    creative) than another.

23
BODEN'S IMPOSSIBILITY THEORY
  • Boden (1990) suggests that an idea is creative
    (for a particular person) if that person could
    not have had that idea before.
  • The could not is defined in terms of what the
    person's mental representations and processes
    allow.

24
BODEN'S IMPOSSIBILITY THEORY (cont.)
  • Thus, unlike Johnson-Laird, she explicitly deals
    with the creation of new genres.
  • However, her ideas apply better to science and
    mathematics than to the arts.
  • In science/maths the creation of the new
    conceptual framework is all important.
  • But in the arts work within a genre/style can be
    equally creative.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com