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      Differences in working memory involvement in analytical and creative tasks: an ERP study.

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      Neuroreport

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          Abstract

          If, as suggested, creative (insight) problem solving is less systematic and employs less planning than analytical problem solving, the former requires substantially less working memory (WM) than the latter. Subjects simultaneously solved problems and counted auditory stimuli (concurrent WM task), in response to which ERPs were recorded. Counting disrupted analytical, but not creative performance. Peak and time-window average P300 were more frontal during analytical problem solving as compared to insight or counting tones only (control). A PCA extracted two factors in the P3 range, one frontal and one broad left-lateralized, which distinguished analytical from creative problem solving. The findings indicate distinct processing pathways for the two types of tasks with more WM involvement in analytical tasks.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Neuroreport
          Neuroreport
          0959-4965
          0959-4965
          Jun 05 2000
          : 11
          : 8
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Psychology, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK.
          Article
          10852211
          a2ccd35b-c9c7-4c61-8118-9057c2cfff61
          History

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