Salvi Carola, Bricolo Emanuela, Franconeri Steven L, Kounios John, Beeman Mark
Department of Psychology, Milano-Bicocca University, Piazza dell'Ateneo Nuovo, 1, 20126, Milano, Italy.
Department of Psychology and Cognitive Brain Mapping Group, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA.
Psychon Bull Rev. 2015 Dec;22(6):1814-9. doi: 10.3758/s13423-015-0845-0.
Creative ideas seem often to appear when we close our eyes, stare at a blank wall, or gaze out of a window--all signs of shutting out distractions and turning attention inward. Prior research has demonstrated that attention-related brain areas are differently active when people solve problems with sudden insight (the Aha! phenomenon), relative to deliberate, analytic solving. We directly investigated the relationship between attention deployment and problem solving by recording eye movements and blinks, which are overt indicators of attention, as people solved short, visually presented problems. In the preparation period, before problems eventually solved by insight, participants blinked more frequently and longer, and made fewer fixations, than before problems eventually solved by analysis. Immediately prior to solutions, participants blinked longer and looked away from the problem more often when solving by insight than when solving analytically. These phenomena extend prior research with a direct demonstration of dynamic differences in attention as people solve problems with sudden insight versus analytically.
创造性的想法似乎常常在我们闭上眼睛、盯着空白的墙壁或望向窗外时出现——所有这些都是排除干扰并将注意力转向内心的迹象。先前的研究表明,当人们通过突然顿悟(即“啊哈!”现象)解决问题时,与注意力相关的大脑区域的活跃程度与通过深思熟虑、分析性解决问题时有所不同。我们通过记录眼球运动和眨眼来直接研究注意力分配与解决问题之间的关系,眼球运动和眨眼是注意力的外在指标,实验中人们要解决简短的视觉呈现问题。在准备阶段,即在最终通过顿悟解决问题之前,参与者比最终通过分析解决问题之前眨眼更频繁、时间更长,注视次数更少。就在解决问题之前,与通过分析解决问题相比,参与者在通过顿悟解决问题时眨眼时间更长,且更频繁地将目光从问题上移开。这些现象扩展了先前的研究,直接证明了人们在通过突然顿悟与分析性方式解决问题时注意力的动态差异。