The authors examine the effects of multiple goals on three different tasks (i.e., two creativity tasks and one intervening task) and the discretion to switch back and forth between tasks on creative performance. They propose that individuals ’ focus of attention and cognitive exhaustion may explain the hypothesized effects on incubation and subsequent creativity. Results demonstrate the highest creativity when individuals have goals for all tasks and discretion to switch between them. The results in part are explained by focus of attention and cognitive exhaustion. The authors dis-cuss how multiple tasks ’ and goals ’ effect on creativity can lead to forced incubation
International audienceThe ability to inhibit common and dominant paths of solutions to a problem see...
Creativity is a valuable attribute that involves the generation of original ideas; attention is a vi...
Compared with approach motivation, avoidance motivation has often been related to reduced creativity...
Our goal with this chapter is to theorize and systematically review the evidence about how interrupt...
The experiment reported here investigated interactions between the type of creative task (verbal or ...
In recent years, consumers have had a tendency to perform more than one task at a time (multitasking...
Bittner JV, Bruena M, Rietzschel EF. Cooperation goals, regulatory focus, and their combined effects...
With the constantly increasing popularity of human multitasking, it is crucial to know why people en...
Although anecdotes that creative thoughts often arise when one is engaged in an unrelated train of t...
This research examined whether situational factors have significant effects on individuals' creativi...
The world today is characterized by stiff competition and people develop an urge for being in the to...
Previous studies have shown that creativity is enhanced by a broad attentional scope, defined as an ...
Compared to approach motivation, avoidance motivation has often been related to reduced creativity b...
Employing forgetting fixation theory, we distinguish between passive and active procrastinators by e...
Compared with approach motivation, avoidance motivation has often been related to reduced creativity...
International audienceThe ability to inhibit common and dominant paths of solutions to a problem see...
Creativity is a valuable attribute that involves the generation of original ideas; attention is a vi...
Compared with approach motivation, avoidance motivation has often been related to reduced creativity...
Our goal with this chapter is to theorize and systematically review the evidence about how interrupt...
The experiment reported here investigated interactions between the type of creative task (verbal or ...
In recent years, consumers have had a tendency to perform more than one task at a time (multitasking...
Bittner JV, Bruena M, Rietzschel EF. Cooperation goals, regulatory focus, and their combined effects...
With the constantly increasing popularity of human multitasking, it is crucial to know why people en...
Although anecdotes that creative thoughts often arise when one is engaged in an unrelated train of t...
This research examined whether situational factors have significant effects on individuals' creativi...
The world today is characterized by stiff competition and people develop an urge for being in the to...
Previous studies have shown that creativity is enhanced by a broad attentional scope, defined as an ...
Compared to approach motivation, avoidance motivation has often been related to reduced creativity b...
Employing forgetting fixation theory, we distinguish between passive and active procrastinators by e...
Compared with approach motivation, avoidance motivation has often been related to reduced creativity...
International audienceThe ability to inhibit common and dominant paths of solutions to a problem see...
Creativity is a valuable attribute that involves the generation of original ideas; attention is a vi...
Compared with approach motivation, avoidance motivation has often been related to reduced creativity...