2016
DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhw288
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The “Creative Right Brain” Revisited: Individual Creativity and Associative Priming in the Right Hemisphere Relate to Hemispheric Asymmetries in Reward Brain Function

Abstract: The idea that creativity resides in the right cerebral hemisphere is persistent in popular science, but has been widely frowned upon by the scientific community due to little empirical support. Yet, creativity is believed to rely on the ability to combine remote concepts into novel and useful ideas, an ability which would depend on associative processing in the right hemisphere. Moreover, associative processing is modulated by dopamine, and asymmetries in dopamine functionality between hemispheres may imbalanc… Show more

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Cited by 24 publications
(26 citation statements)
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References 124 publications
(195 reference statements)
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“…Amabile and Tighe (1993) described creativity as driven by intrinsic motivation. Even at a neuronal level, a link with motivation was found with dopamine-related activities as a determinant of human creativity (Aberg et al, 2016). This is a promising starting point for research into fostering school motivation (Aberg et al, 2016), as creativity may support intrinsic motivation in (science) classes.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
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“…Amabile and Tighe (1993) described creativity as driven by intrinsic motivation. Even at a neuronal level, a link with motivation was found with dopamine-related activities as a determinant of human creativity (Aberg et al, 2016). This is a promising starting point for research into fostering school motivation (Aberg et al, 2016), as creativity may support intrinsic motivation in (science) classes.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Even at a neuronal level, a link with motivation was found with dopamine-related activities as a determinant of human creativity (Aberg et al, 2016). This is a promising starting point for research into fostering school motivation (Aberg et al, 2016), as creativity may support intrinsic motivation in (science) classes. Furthermore, recent evidence has found neurophysiological gender differences (Abraham, 2016;Tyan et al, 2017).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
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“…Importantly, the magnitude of this congruency effect is modulated by the presence of conflict in the preceding trial: it is smaller following a high conflict, incongruent trial than following a low conflict, congruent trial (Gratton et al, 1992 ). Although some researchers have accounted for these adaptation effects in the Flanker Task in terms of stimulus repetition (e.g., Mayr et al, 2003 ; Nieuwenhuis et al, 2006 ), such effects are also present in the Stroop and Simon tasks; the fact that the effect generalizes to other tasks that induce high amounts of conflict and when stimulus repetition has been controlled suggests that common mechanisms for mediating conflict may exist (e.g., Stürmer et al, 2002 ; Kerns et al, 2004 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is more challenging than one might expect given than the focus in the present study follows a local approach whereas neuroimaging research on creativity is increasingly shifting to the norm of global approaches to understanding creative neurocognition where the focus is on uncovering the dynamics of the interactions between large-scale networks (Abraham, in press). Several studies have examined the brain basis of individual differences in creativity (e.g., Aberg, Doell, & Schwartz, 2016;Jung et al, 2010;Takeuchi et al, 2010aTakeuchi et al, , 2010b. For instance, a well designed recent comparison of brain activity of high and low creative individuals using task-based fMRI and task-free resting state connectivity analyses revealed heightened functional connections between hub regions of the default mode network (posterior cingulate), the central executive network (dorsolateral prefrontal cortex) and the salience network (anterior insula) (Beaty et al, 2018).…”
Section: Interpreting the Findings In Relation To Those Following Othmentioning
confidence: 99%