Chain free association, creativity, and the default mode network
暂无分享,去创建一个
Talma Hendler | Yulia Lerner | Irit Shapira-Lichter | Sivan Kinreich | Miriam Faust | Tali R. Marron | Ety Berant | T. Hendler | Y. Lerner | S. Kinreich | M. Faust | I. Shapira-Lichter | Ety Berant | Sivan Kinreich
[1] Hongkeun Kim,et al. Dissociating the roles of the default-mode, dorsal, and ventral networks in episodic memory retrieval , 2010, NeuroImage.
[2] Mathias Benedek,et al. Creating metaphors: The neural basis of figurative language production , 2014, NeuroImage.
[3] D. Schacter,et al. Network neuroscience of creative cognition: mapping cognitive mechanisms and individual differences in the creative brain , 2019, Current Opinion in Behavioral Sciences.
[4] Jesper Andersson,et al. Valid conjunction inference with the minimum statistic , 2005, NeuroImage.
[5] Moshe Bar,et al. The proactive brain: memory for predictions , 2009, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[6] Colin Martindale,et al. Creativity and speed of information processing: A double dissociation involving elementary versus inhibitory cognitive tasks , 2008 .
[7] R. Buckner,et al. Functional-Anatomic Fractionation of the Brain's Default Network , 2010, Neuron.
[8] R. Nathan Spreng,et al. The wandering brain: Meta-analysis of functional neuroimaging studies of mind-wandering and related spontaneous thought processes , 2015, NeuroImage.
[9] Oshin Vartanian,et al. The effects of a single night of sleep deprivation on fluency and prefrontal cortex function during divergent thinking , 2014, Front. Hum. Neurosci..
[10] Roger E. Beaty,et al. Does insight problem solving predict real-world creativity? , 2014 .
[11] C. Bollas. The Evocative Object World , 2008 .
[12] Matthijs Baas,et al. Working Memory Benefits Creative Insight, Musical Improvisation, and Original Ideation Through Maintained Task-Focused Attention , 2012, Personality & social psychology bulletin.
[13] William W. Graves,et al. Where is the semantic system? A critical review and meta-analysis of 120 functional neuroimaging studies. , 2009, Cerebral cortex.
[14] Elizabeth Jefferies,et al. Down but not out in posterior cingulate cortex: Deactivation yet functional coupling with prefrontal cortex during demanding semantic cognition , 2016, NeuroImage.
[15] Abraham Goldstein,et al. Fine-coarse semantic processing in schizophrenia: A reversed pattern of hemispheric dominance , 2014, Neuropsychologia.
[16] J. Aharon-Peretz,et al. The origins of originality: The neural bases of creative thinking and originality , 2011, Neuropsychologia.
[17] L. W. Mok. The interplay between spontaneous and controlled processing in creative cognition , 2014, Frontiers in human neuroscience.
[18] I. Wilkinson,et al. Toward a Cognitive Neurobiological Account of Free Association , 2009 .
[19] Cornelius Weiller,et al. Revisiting the Functional Specialization of Left Inferior Frontal Gyrus in Phonological and Semantic Fluency: The Crucial Role of Task Demands and Individual Ability , 2013, The Journal of Neuroscience.
[20] J. Rossiter,et al. The Remote Associates Test: Divergent or Convergent Thinking? , 1966, Psychological reports.
[21] Matthijs Baas,et al. The dual pathway to creativity model: Creative ideation as a function of flexibility and persistence , 2010 .
[22] R. C. Oldfield. The assessment and analysis of handedness: the Edinburgh inventory. , 1971, Neuropsychologia.
[23] Daniel L. Schacter,et al. Default network activity, coupled with the frontoparietal control network, supports goal-directed cognition , 2010, NeuroImage.
[24] M. L. Lambon Ralph,et al. The Neural Organization of Semantic Control: TMS Evidence for a Distributed Network in Left Inferior Frontal and Posterior Middle Temporal Gyrus , 2010, Cerebral cortex.
[25] E. Koechlin,et al. Anterior Prefrontal Function and the Limits of Human Decision-Making , 2007, Science.
[26] M. Raichle. The brain's default mode network. , 2015, Annual review of neuroscience.
[27] T. Hendler,et al. Portraying the unique contribution of the default mode network to internally driven mnemonic processes , 2013, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[28] Xiaoping P. Hu,et al. fMRI evidence for word association and situated simulation in conceptual processing , 2008, Journal of Physiology-Paris.
[29] G. Josse,et al. Rostral and caudal prefrontal contribution to creativity: a meta-analysis of functional imaging data , 2013, Front. Hum. Neurosci..
[30] M. Brass,et al. Differences between endogenous and exogenous emotion inhibition in the human brain , 2014, Brain Structure and Function.
[31] G L Shulman,et al. INAUGURAL ARTICLE by a Recently Elected Academy Member:A default mode of brain function , 2001 .
[32] Brian Everitt,et al. A systematic review and quantitative appraisal of fMRI studies of verbal fluency: Role of the left inferior frontal gyrus , 2006, Human brain mapping.
[33] S. Mednick,et al. The Remote Associates Test , 1968 .
[34] F. May,et al. A Factor-Analytic Study of Spontaneous-Flexibility Measures , 1965 .
[35] M. Benedek,et al. Differential effects of cognitive inhibition and intelligence on creativity , 2012, Personality and individual differences.
[36] L. Derogatis,et al. The Brief Symptom Inventory: an introductory report , 1983, Psychological Medicine.
[37] P. Silvia,et al. Default and Executive Network Coupling Supports Creative Idea Production , 2015, Scientific Reports.
[38] P. Silvia,et al. The roles of associative and executive processes in creative cognition , 2014, Memory & cognition.
[39] Yoed N. Kenett. Going the Extra Creative Mile: The Role of Semantic Distance in Creativity – Theory, Research, and Measurement , 2018 .
[40] David Badre,et al. Left ventrolateral prefrontal cortex and the cognitive control of memory , 2007, Neuropsychologia.
[41] I. Levin. Creativity and two modes of associative fluency: Chains and stars1 , 1978 .
[42] Wolfgang Stroebe,et al. How the Group Affects the Mind: A Cognitive Model of Idea Generation in Groups , 2006, Personality and social psychology review : an official journal of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Inc.
[43] M. Runco,et al. Divergent Thinking as an Indicator of Creative Potential , 2012 .
[44] M. Sigman,et al. Automated analysis of free speech predicts psychosis onset in high-risk youths , 2015, npj Schizophrenia.
[45] C. Martindale,et al. Creativity and Speed of Mental Processing , 1999 .
[46] Zachary C. Irving,et al. Mind-wandering as spontaneous thought: a dynamic framework , 2016, Nature Reviews Neuroscience.
[47] Simon B. Eickhoff,et al. Specialisation in Broca's region for semantic, phonological, and syntactic fluency? , 2008, NeuroImage.
[48] Wei Li,et al. Subregions of the human superior frontal gyrus and their connections , 2013, NeuroImage.
[49] Mathias Benedek,et al. Revisiting Mednick’s Model on Creativity-Related Differences in Associative Hierarchies. Evidence for a Common Path to Uncommon Thought , 2013, The Journal of creative behavior.
[50] A. Dietrich,et al. The role of (dis)inhibition in creativity: Decreased inhibition improves idea generation , 2015, Cognition.
[51] Anthony Randal McIntosh,et al. A common functional brain network for autobiographical, episodic, and semantic memory retrieval , 2010, NeuroImage.
[52] S. Mednick. The associative basis of the creative process. , 1962, Psychological review.
[53] A. Braun,et al. Neural Correlates of Lyrical Improvisation: An fMRI Study of Freestyle Rap , 2012, Scientific Reports.
[54] L. Gabora. Revenge of the “Neurds”: Characterizing Creative Thought in Terms of the Structure and Dynamics of Memory , 2010, 1308.5037.
[55] Zachary C. Irving,et al. The Neuroscience of Spontaneous Thought: An Evolving, Interdisciplinary Field , 2017, 1704.02533.
[56] C. Kessler,et al. Neural correlates of creative writing: An fMRI Study , 2013, Human brain mapping.
[57] M. Jung-Beeman. Bilateral brain processes for comprehending natural language , 2005, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.
[58] R. N. Spreng,et al. The default network and self‐generated thought: component processes, dynamic control, and clinical relevance , 2014, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.
[59] Rex E. Jung,et al. Musical Creativity “Revealed” in Brain Structure: Interplay between Motor, Default Mode, and Limbic Networks , 2016, Scientific Reports.
[60] J. Guilford,et al. A Factor-Analytic Study of Flexibility in Thinking , 1959 .
[61] A. Dietrich,et al. A review of EEG, ERP, and neuroimaging studies of creativity and insight. , 2010, Psychological bulletin.
[62] Simon B Eickhoff,et al. Investigating the Functional Heterogeneity of the Default Mode Network Using Coordinate-Based Meta-Analytic Modeling , 2009, The Journal of Neuroscience.
[63] R. Buckner,et al. Evidence for the Default Network's Role in Spontaneous Cognition , 2010 .
[64] Allan L. Reiss,et al. Creativity training enhances goal-directed attention and information processing , 2014 .
[65] Maayan Pereg,et al. The role of working memory in rapid instructed task learning and intention-based reflexivity: An individual differences examination , 2016, Neuropsychologia.
[66] M. Benedek,et al. Intelligence, creativity, and cognitive control: The common and differential involvement of executive functions in intelligence and creativity , 2014, Intelligence.
[67] A. Postma,et al. Shared and distinct anatomical correlates of semantic and phonemic fluency revealed by lesion-symptom mapping in patients with ischemic stroke , 2015, Brain Structure and Function.
[68] Bernard Mazoyer,et al. Meta-analyzing left hemisphere language areas: Phonology, semantics, and sentence processing , 2006, NeuroImage.
[69] Marcel Brass,et al. The importance of the default mode network in creativity: A structural MRI study , 2014 .
[70] J. Attems,et al. White matter connections of the supplementary motor area in humans , 2014, Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry.
[71] Charles Dobson,et al. Evaluative and generative modes of thought during the creative process , 2012, NeuroImage.
[72] John Baer,et al. Gender Differences in Creativity , 2008 .
[73] J. Dul,et al. Is creativity without intelligence possible? A Necessary Condition Analysis , 2016 .
[74] T. Hendler,et al. Distinct functional connectivity of the hippocampus during semantic and phonemic fluency , 2015, Neuropsychologia.
[75] James M. Shine,et al. Shaped by our thoughts – A new task to assess spontaneous cognition and its associated neural correlates in the default network , 2015, Brain and Cognition.
[76] G. Stoltzfus,et al. GENDER, GENDER ROLE, AND CREATIVITY , 2011 .
[77] Oshin Vartanian,et al. Neuroscience of decision making , 2011 .
[78] M. Bar,et al. The units of thought , 2007, Hippocampus.
[79] Sharon L. Thompson-Schill,et al. Role of the left inferior frontal gyrus in covert word retrieval: Neural correlates of switching during verbal fluency , 2006, Neuropsychologia.
[80] Miriam Faust,et al. Thinking outside the Left Box: The Role of the Right Hemisphere in Novel Metaphor Comprehension , 2012 .
[81] K D Singh,et al. Transient and linearly graded deactivation of the human default-mode network by a visual detection task , 2008, NeuroImage.
[82] Daniel L. Schacter,et al. Creative constraints: Brain activity and network dynamics underlying semantic interference during idea production , 2017, NeuroImage.
[83] C. Neuper,et al. The creative brain: Investigation of brain activity during creative problem solving by means of EEG and FMRI , 2009, Human brain mapping.
[84] D. Schacter,et al. The Brain's Default Network , 2008, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.
[85] K. Gilhooly,et al. Divergent thinking: strategies and executive involvement in generating novel uses for familiar objects. , 2007, British journal of psychology.
[86] A. Turken,et al. Left inferior frontal gyrus is critical for response inhibition , 2008, BMC Neuroscience.
[87] Fredrik Ullén,et al. Cortical Regions Involved in the Generation of Musical Structures during Improvisation in Pianists , 2007, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[88] D. Schacter,et al. Creative Cognition and Brain Network Dynamics , 2016, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.
[89] B. Nevo,et al. Concurrent Validity of the American Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) and the Israeli Inter-University Psychometric Entrance Test (IUPET) , 1986 .
[90] Emily C. Nusbaum,et al. Are intelligence and creativity really so different? ☆: Fluid intelligence, executive processes, and strategy use in divergent thinking , 2011 .
[91] Alex Martin,et al. Neural systems supporting lexical search guided by letter and semantic category cues: A self-paced overt response fMRI study of verbal fluency , 2010, NeuroImage.
[92] Darya L. Zabelina,et al. Dynamic network interactions supporting internally-oriented cognition , 2016, Current Opinion in Neurobiology.
[93] Rachelle Smith,et al. ELEVEN The Role of Spontaneous Thought in Human Cognition , 2008 .
[94] Abraham Goldstein,et al. Magnetoencephalographic evidence of early right hemisphere overactivation during metaphor comprehension in schizophrenia. , 2015, Psychophysiology.
[95] M. Bar. A cognitive neuroscience hypothesis of mood and depression , 2009, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.
[96] Naama Mayseless,et al. Generating original ideas: The neural underpinning of originality , 2015, NeuroImage.
[97] C. D. De Dreu,et al. A meta-analysis of 25 years of mood-creativity research: hedonic tone, activation, or regulatory focus? , 2008, Psychological bulletin.
[98] B. Hommel,et al. The (b)link between creativity and dopamine: Spontaneous eye blink rates predict and dissociate divergent and convergent thinking , 2010, Cognition.
[99] Rebecca M. Todd,et al. Dynamics of neural recruitment surrounding the spontaneous arising of thoughts in experienced mindfulness practitioners , 2016, NeuroImage.
[100] Miriam Faust,et al. Free association, divergent thinking, and creativity: Cognitive and neural perspectives. , 2018 .
[101] Yasuyuki Taki,et al. The association between resting functional connectivity and creativity. , 2012, Cerebral cortex.
[102] A. Miyake,et al. Unity and diversity of executive functions: Individual differences as a window on cognitive structure , 2017, Cortex.
[103] Mark A. Runco,et al. Which Test of Divergent Thinking Is Best? , 2016 .
[104] Thomas E. Nichols,et al. Thresholding of Statistical Maps in Functional Neuroimaging Using the False Discovery Rate , 2002, NeuroImage.
[105] Kangcheng Wang,et al. Increased resting functional connectivity of the medial prefrontal cortex in creativity by means of cognitive stimulation , 2014, Cortex.
[106] M. Benedek,et al. Associative abilities underlying creativity. , 2012 .
[107] David J. Therriault,et al. The cognitive underpinnings of creative thought: A latent variable analysis exploring the roles of intelligence and working memory in three creative thinking processes , 2013 .
[108] Mathias Benedek,et al. Assessment of Divergent Thinking by means of the Subjective Top-Scoring Method: Effects of the Number of Top-Ideas and Time-on-Task on Reliability and Validity. , 2013, Psychology of aesthetics, creativity, and the arts.
[109] Mathias Benedek,et al. Brain mechanisms associated with internally directed attention and self-generated thought , 2016, Scientific Reports.
[110] Oshin Vartanian,et al. Dissociating the roles of right ventral lateral and dorsal lateral prefrontal cortex in generation and maintenance of hypotheses in set-shift problems. , 2005, Cerebral cortex.
[111] L. Almeida,et al. Metaphor creation: a measure of creativity or intelligence? , 2010 .
[112] N. Milgram,et al. Creative thinking and creative performance in Israeli students. , 1976, Journal of educational psychology.
[113] Christophe Ley,et al. Detecting outliers: Do not use standard deviation around the mean, use absolute deviation around the median , 2013 .
[114] Kaia L. Vilberg,et al. Brain Networks Underlying Episodic Memory Retrieval This Review Comes from a Themed Issue on Macrocircuits Memory Signals within the Mtl , 2022 .
[115] N. Mashal,et al. The role of the right cerebral hemisphere in processing novel metaphoric expressions taken from poetry: A divided visual field study , 2007, Neuropsychologia.
[116] Michael D. Robinson,et al. Patterning and nonpatterning in creative cognition: Insights from performance in a random number generation task , 2012 .
[117] Rosa Aurora Chávez-Eakle,et al. Cerebral blood flow associated with creative performance: A comparative study , 2007, NeuroImage.
[118] David J. Therriault,et al. A measure of creativity or intelligence? Examining internal and external structure validity evidence of the Remote Associates Test , 2014 .
[119] S. Shamay-Tsoory,et al. Enhancing verbal creativity: Modulating creativity by altering the balance between right and left inferior frontal gyrus with tDCS , 2015, Neuroscience.
[120] Zachary C. Irving,et al. The Neuroscience of Spontaneous Thought , 2018 .
[121] Geraint Rees,et al. The default network and the combination of cognitive processes that mediate self-generated thought , 2017, Nature Human Behaviour.
[122] Jutta S. Mayer,et al. Specialization in the default mode: Task‐induced brain deactivations dissociate between visual working memory and attention , 2009, Human brain mapping.
[123] Michal Lavidor,et al. The Role of the Right Cerebral Hemisphere in Processing Novel Metaphoric Expressions: A Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Study , 2008, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[124] R. Jung,et al. The structure of creative cognition in the human brain , 2013, Front. Hum. Neurosci..
[125] On the interchangeability of individually administered and group administered ability tests , 2003 .
[126] M. J. Emerson,et al. The Unity and Diversity of Executive Functions and Their Contributions to Complex “Frontal Lobe” Tasks: A Latent Variable Analysis , 2000, Cognitive Psychology.
[127] Yoed N. Kenett,et al. Investigating the structure of semantic networks in low and high creative persons , 2014, Front. Hum. Neurosci..
[128] Daniel L. Schacter,et al. Default network contributions to episodic and semantic processing during divergent creative thinking: A representational similarity analysis , 2019, NeuroImage.
[129] A. Abraham,et al. Gender differences in creative thinking: behavioral and fMRI findings , 2014, Brain Imaging and Behavior.
[130] K. Christoff,et al. Experience sampling during fMRI reveals default network and executive system contributions to mind wandering , 2009, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[131] Miriam Faust,et al. Metaphors and verbal creativity: The role of the right hemisphere , 2012, Laterality.
[132] Donna Rose Addis,et al. Creativity and Memory , 2015, Psychological science.
[133] M. Benedek,et al. Creativity on tap? Effects of alcohol intoxication on creative cognition , 2017, Consciousness and Cognition.
[134] Mark A. Runco,et al. Flexibility and Originality in Children's Divergent Thinking , 1986 .
[135] Roger E. Beaty,et al. Verbal fluency and creativity: General and specific contributions of broad retrieval ability (Gr) factors to divergent thinking , 2013 .
[136] J. Talairach,et al. Co-Planar Stereotaxic Atlas of the Human Brain: 3-Dimensional Proportional System: An Approach to Cerebral Imaging , 1988 .
[137] Donald R. McCreary,et al. Handbook of Gender Research in Psychology , 2010 .
[138] Cheryl L. Grady,et al. Common and Unique Neural Activations in Autobiographical, Episodic, and Semantic Retrieval , 2007, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[139] H. Eysenck. Genius: The Natural History of Creativity , 1995 .
[140] N. Axmacher,et al. Neural activity during free association to conflict–related sentences , 2013, Front. Hum. Neurosci..
[141] Colin Martindale,et al. Divergent thinking ability is related to faster relatedness judgments. , 2009 .
[142] Y. Benjamini,et al. THE CONTROL OF THE FALSE DISCOVERY RATE IN MULTIPLE TESTING UNDER DEPENDENCY , 2001 .
[143] Mathias Benedek,et al. The relationship between intelligence and creativity: New support for the threshold hypothesis by means of empirical breakpoint detection , 2013, Intelligence.