divergent thinking psych 2426
ideational fluency
ability to generate large number of potential solutions to a creative problem quality is a function of quantity
Carson's Connect Brainset:
ability to generate lots of ideas i.e. many possible answers vs. absolutes. filtering stops and you find novel and complex attracts judgement is suspended
entity theory (fixed mindset)
core qualities are built in fixed by nature i.e. intelligence, moral, character
neuroscience of connect brainiest:
defocused attention activation of right hemisphere PFC activation of association areas
synaesthesia:
different sensory and verbal systems appear crossed i.e. colors have taste and sound has color
semantic network theory:
each bit of knowledge is a node through memory or learning each neuron is a node and the connections between neurons are links this is how we make random connections randomly thinking of something and tracing back through the knowledge
what are the two different mindsets?
entity theory (fixed mindset) incremental theory (growth mindset)
brainstorming
generate as many ideas as possible without judging later review; process of eliminating some building on and or combining others does it work no
who is Carol Dweck?
he is the one who said that the hallmark of human nature is our capacity to adapt change and grow seem to have built in ability to learn
what is the challenge of a fixed mindset?
less resilient in the face of setback i.e. may stereotype threat self short term effect: anxiety long term effect: disidentification
what does divergent thinking have to do with creativity?
making a habit of forming connections between ideas and objects that are seemingly unconnected
divergent thinking:
process of generating multiple related ideas for a given topic or solutions to a problem it is a spontaneous and free-flowing
incremental theory (growth mindset)
qualities can be developed through nature and effort (effort, education, development) seek out challenging learning opportunities higher motivation during academic transitions understand others' behavior in terms of situations and psychological processes
what are the three types of problems?
reasonable (logical) unreasonable (illogical) ill-structured (open-ended)
convergent thinking
use brain (knowledge and memories) to identify one right answer to well defined problem i.e. exams and quizzes