| Literature DB >> 26779087 |
Abstract
Memoires by eminently creative people often describe architectural spaces and qualities they believe instrumental for their creativity. However, places designed to encourage creativity have had mixed results, with some found to decrease creative productivity for users. This may be due, in part, to lack of suitable empirical theory or model to guide design strategies. Relationships between creative cognition and features of the physical environment remain largely uninvestigated in the scientific literature, despite general agreement among researchers that human cognition is physically and socially situated. This paper investigates what role architectural settings may play in creative processes by examining documented first person and biographical accounts of creativity with respect to three central theories of situated cognition. First, the embodied thesis argues that cognition encompasses both the mind and the body. Second, the embedded thesis maintains that people exploit features of the physical and social environment to increase their cognitive capabilities. Third, the enaction thesis describes cognition as dependent upon a person's interactions with the world. Common themes inform three propositions, illustrated in a new theoretical framework describing relationships between people and their architectural settings with respect to different cognitive processes of creativity. The framework is intended as a starting point toward an ecological model of creativity, which may be used to guide future creative process research and architectural design strategies to support user creative productivity.Entities:
Keywords: affordance; architectural design; creativity; ecological psychology; embedded cognition; embodied cognition; enactive cognition; niche construction
Year: 2016 PMID: 26779087 PMCID: PMC4701984 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01978
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Creative stage models compared.
| Modes of creative thinking | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Model Author(s) | Problem-finding/Problem-framing | Ideation | Implementation/Feedback from use | |||
| Generating | Incubating | Elaborating | ||||
| Preparation | Incubation, Illumination | Verification | ||||
| Observation, Analysis, Survey | Formulation, Critique, Invention | Experimentation, Selection, Perfection | ||||
| Orientation, Preparation, Analysis | Hypothesis | Incubation | Synthesis, Verification | |||
| Groundwork | Immersion, Divergent Exploration | Selection, Articulation, Transformation | Implementation | |||
| Identify Problem, Define Goals | Explore Approaches | Act on Plan | Look at Effects | |||
| Objective Finding, Fact Finding, Problem Finding | Idea Finding | Solution Finding | Acceptance Finding | |||
| Conception | Gestation, Pasturation | Bringing Up Baby | ||||
| Preparation, Frustration | Incubation, Insight | Evaluation, Elaboration | ||||
| Flow | ||||||
| Problem Construction, Knowledge Acquisition, Concept Selection | Novel Combination, Ideation | Evaluation | Implementation and Feedback | |||
| Generative | Exploratory | |||||
| Internalize Domain | Generate Novelty | Externalize Ideas | Submit to Field, Evaluate, Disseminate | |||
| Frame Problems, Explore Data, Construct Opportunities | Generate Ideas | Develop Solutions | Build Acceptance | |||
The 3E’s and modes of creative ideation: summary of themes.
| 3E Theories | Generating | Elaborating | Incubating |
|---|---|---|---|
| Intuitive immersion in creative flow | Explicit evaluation and exploration of an idea | Semi-conscious rumination about an idea | |
| Tools and materials may be embodied, but this is not critical to the process. | Tools and materials are likely embodied when working on mundane tasks unrelated to the creative problem | ||
| People describe rituals (like walking or riding a train) and favorite settings with similar sensory qualities to help them incubate; they do not, however, express integration of these places into concept of creative self. | |||
| Environmental cues positively influence insight during incubation. | |||