Metacontrol of human creativity: The neurocognitive mechanisms of convergent and divergent thinking

Creativity is a complex construct that would benefit from a more comprehensive mechanistic approach. Two processes have been defined to be central to creative cognition: divergent and convergent thinking. These two processes are most often studied using the Alternate Uses Test (heavily relying on di...

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Vydané v:NeuroImage (Orlando, Fla.) Ročník 210; s. 116572
Hlavní autori: Zhang, Weitao, Sjoerds, Zsuzsika, Hommel, Bernhard
Médium: Journal Article
Jazyk:English
Vydavateľské údaje: United States Elsevier Inc 15.04.2020
Elsevier Limited
Elsevier
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ISSN:1053-8119, 1095-9572, 1095-9572
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Shrnutí:Creativity is a complex construct that would benefit from a more comprehensive mechanistic approach. Two processes have been defined to be central to creative cognition: divergent and convergent thinking. These two processes are most often studied using the Alternate Uses Test (heavily relying on divergent thinking), and the Remote Associates Test (heavily relying on convergent thinking, at least with analytical solutions). Although creative acts should be regarded compound processes, most behavioral and neuroimaging studies ignore the composition of basic operations relevant for the task they investigate. In order to provide leverage for a more mechanistic, and eventually even comprehensive computational, approach to creative cognition, we compare findings from divergent and convergent thinking studies and review the similarities and differences between the two underlying types of processes, from a neurocognitive perspective with a strong focus on cortical structures. In this narrative review, we discuss a broad scope of neural correlates of divergent and convergent thinking. We provide a first step towards theoretical integration, by suggesting that creative cognition in divergent- and convergent-thinking heavy tasks is modulated by metacontrol states, where divergent thinking and insight solutions in convergent-thinking tasks seem to benefit from metacontrol biases towards flexibility, whereas convergent, analytical thinking seems to benefit from metacontrol biases towards persistence. These particular biases seem to be reflected by specific cortical brain-activation patterns, involving left frontal and right temporal/parietal networks. Our tentative framework could serve as a first proxy to guide neuroscientific creativity research into assessing more mechanistic details of human creative cognition. •Creative cognition is classically regarded to involve a trade-off of divergent/flexible, and convergent/persistent processes.•Mechanisms of divergent or convergent thinking are often studied in isolation, offering little chance for direct comparison.•We highlight important (cortical) neurocognitive mechanisms of divergent and convergent thinking, to facilitate comparison.•We offer theoretical integration, assuming that divergent and convergent thinking rely on differences in metacontrol states
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ISSN:1053-8119
1095-9572
1095-9572
DOI:10.1016/j.neuroimage.2020.116572