What Does Temporal Brain Signal Complexity Reveal About Verbal Creativity?
Lebenswissenschaftliche Fakultät
Recent empirical evidence reveals that creative idea generation builds upon an
interplay of multiple neural networks. Measures of temporal complexity yield important
information about the underlying mechanisms of these co-activated neural networks.
A few neurophysiological studies investigated brain signal complexity (BSC) during
the production of creative verbal associations and resting states, aiming to relate
it with creative task performance. However, it is unknown whether the complexity
of brain signals can distinguish between productions of typical and original verbal
associations. In the present study, we investigated verbal creativity with multiscale
entropy (MSE) of electroencephalography (EEG) signals, which quantifies complexity
over multiple timescales, capturing unique dynamic features of neural networks. MSE
was measured in verbal divergent thinking (DT) states while emphasizing on producing
either typical verbal associations or original verbal associations. We hypothesized
that MSE differentiates between brain states characterizing the production of typical
and original associations and is a sensitive neural marker of individual differences in
producing original associations. Results from a sample of N = 92 young adults revealed
slightly higher average MSE for original as compared with typical association production
in small and medium timescales at frontal electrodes and slightly higher average MSE
for typical association production in higher timescales at parietal electrodes. However,
measurement models failed to uncover specificity of individual differences as MSE in
typical vs. original associations was perfectly correlated. Hence, individuals with higher
MSE in original association condition also exhibit higher MSE during the production
of typical associations. The difference between typical and original association MSE
was not significantly associated with human-rated originality of the verbal associations.
In sum, we conclude that MSE is a potential marker of creative verbal association
states, but replications and extensions are needed, especially with respect to the
brain-behavior relationships.
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