Evidence for an Asymmetric Switch Cost in State Creativity

被引:0
|
作者
Cortes, Robert A. [1 ]
Pena, Mafalda C. B. [1 ]
Daker, Richard J. [1 ]
Colaizzi, Griffin A. [1 ,2 ]
Green, Adam E. [1 ]
机构
[1] Georgetown Univ, Washington, DC USA
[2] Northeastern Univ, Boston, MA USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
SEMANTIC DISTANCE; COGNITIVE CONTROL; INHIBITORY CONTROL; THIN SLICES; CORTEX; TASK; DIVERGENT; INTELLIGENCE; CONVERGENT; ACTIVATION;
D O I
10.1080/10400419.2023.2212999
中图分类号
G44 [教育心理学];
学科分类号
0402 ; 040202 ;
摘要
The role of top-down control in divergent creativity remains heavily debated. An outstanding question about the state dynamics of creativity concerns acute shifts between heightened and lowered creative states. Particularly, do transitions between creative states incur a "switch cost" as observed in other domains of cognition? Prior research showed that asymmetric switch costs are often incurred such that reaction time is asymmetrically slower when participants switch from a task involving more top-down control to a task involving less top-down control. We tested the hypothesis that frequent acute transitions from creativity-cued responding (associated with heightened creative state) to uncued responding (associated with lowered creative state) would incur an asymmetric switch cost such that uncued responding would be disproportionately impacted by state changes. We utilized the "thin slices" verb generation task in a task-switching paradigm. Consistent with the hypothesis of asymmetric switch costs in shifts between creative states, we observed a substantial switch cost when switching from creativity-cued trials to uncued trials, but no switch cost when switching from uncued trials to creativity-cued trials. These findings provide indirect evidence that heightened creative states may require substantially more top-down control than lowered creative states, supporting the theory that divergent creativity requires increased top-down control.
引用
收藏
页码:629 / 639
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Not inertia but reconfiguration: Asymmetric switch cost in a hierarchical task
    Li, Junchen
    Cao, Bihua
    Han, Jiahui
    Xie, Liufang
    Li, Fuhong
    BRAIN RESEARCH, 2019, 1720
  • [2] Asymmetric switch cost between subitizing and estimation in tactile modality
    Lou, Chunmiao
    Zeng, Huanke
    Chen, Lihan
    CURRENT PSYCHOLOGY, 2023, 42 (18) : 15141 - 15155
  • [3] Asymmetric switch cost between subitizing and estimation in tactile modality
    Chunmiao Lou
    Huanke Zeng
    Lihan Chen
    Current Psychology, 2023, 42 : 15141 - 15155
  • [4] Employee satisfaction and asymmetric cost behavior: Evidence from Glassdoor
    Kim, Jonghwan
    Ra, Kyeongheum
    ECONOMICS LETTERS, 2022, 219
  • [5] Board characteristics and asymmetric cost behavior: evidence from Egypt
    Ibrahim, Awad Elsayed Awad
    ACCOUNTING RESEARCH JOURNAL, 2018, 31 (02) : 301 - 322
  • [6] Asymmetric output cost of lowering inflation: empirical evidence for Canada
    Huh, HS
    Lee, HH
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS-REVUE CANADIENNE D ECONOMIQUE, 2002, 35 (02): : 218 - 238
  • [7] Reducing asymmetric cost behaviors: Evidence from digital innovation
    Du, Xinyi
    Jiang, Kangqi
    Zheng, Xian
    HUMANITIES & SOCIAL SCIENCES COMMUNICATIONS, 2024, 11 (01):
  • [8] Switch cost modulations in bilingual sentence processing: evidence from shadowing
    Bultena, Sybrine
    Dijkstra, Ton
    van Hell, Janet G.
    LANGUAGE COGNITION AND NEUROSCIENCE, 2015, 30 (05) : 586 - 605
  • [9] Split Ratings and Asymmetric Cost Behavior: Empirical Evidence from Korea
    Kim, Yujin
    An, Jungin
    JOURNAL OF ASIAN FINANCE ECONOMICS AND BUSINESS, 2022, 9 (07): : 185 - 196
  • [10] On the asymmetric clocked buffered switch
    J.W. Cohen
    Queueing Systems, 1998, 30 : 385 - 404