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Explaining Creativity Celia, Katherine, & Lauren FNAR 337

Explaining Creativity

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Explaining Creativity . Celia, Katherine, & Lauren FNAR 337. Bubbles, Lines, and String: How Information Visualization Shapes Society. Peter Hall. 3 Categories of Visualization :. Scientific aims to discover new patterns in large datasets a ssumption of objectivity Journalistic - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Explaining Creativity

Explaining Creativity Celia, Katherine, & Lauren

FNAR 337

Page 2: Explaining Creativity

Bubbles, Lines, and String:

How Information Visualization Shapes Society

Peter Hall

Page 3: Explaining Creativity

3 Categories of Visualization:

• Scientific– aims to discover new patterns in large datasets– assumption of objectivity

• Journalistic– seeks to simplify and explain datasets for the public– inform and transform public opinion

• Artistic– reflects cultural conditions– calls into question claims of transparency, certainty, and

objectivity

Page 4: Explaining Creativity

3 Categories - Scientific“Visualization is one of only two factors responsible for the explosive development of all modern science.”

– Alfred Corsby, historian

Daily simulation to predict the movement of oil along the gulf coast. Uses satellite imagery to visualize data in its geographic context.

Visualization by Adam Kubach and Karla Vega, Texas Advanced Computing Center, The University of Texas at Austin.

Page 5: Explaining Creativity

3 Categories - Journalistic

“It is our job to edit, condense and reduce.”– Steve Dunes,

NYT Graphics Department

Hans Rosling’s 2006 TED animation debunking preconceptions of the developing world.

Originally an educational tool, takes on journalistic aspects by transforming public opinion.

Page 6: Explaining Creativity

3 Categories - Artistic

“Even articles that are not controversial are sometimes targets for malicious users. The image below shows the history of the article on ‘history’. The rightmost black slice shows when a user replaced the entire article with the simple word ‘ha.’”

Wattenberg, History Flow

Page 7: Explaining Creativity

Absence of critique

• Data is seen as pure– Often, visual representations are critiqued only through

the lens of usability– “Who made it, for whom, and for what purpose –

ideology 101.”– Johanna Drucker

• “Mapping has politics.” – Jeremy Crampton– Rather than describing the world, are we making up the

world? (Through framing, selection, etc.)– Look for silences – what is left out?

Page 8: Explaining Creativity

Future of Visualization

• Information visualization becoming more interdisciplinary.– The way the visualization is designed affects the data

mining.– Hall argues that scientific, journalistic and artistic

methods have much to teach each other.

Page 9: Explaining Creativity

Explaining Creativity:The Science of Human Innovation

Keith Sawyer

Page 10: Explaining Creativity

Why is creativity important?• Competition with globalized markets• Ever-improving information and communication

technologies• Automation of uncreative jobs• Increased demand for products of the creative

industries

Page 11: Explaining Creativity

Modern Creativity Research• First wave – personalities of creators • Second wave – cognitive psychology • Third wave – socio-cultural approach• The interdisciplinary approach• What do we get from researching creativity?

Page 12: Explaining Creativity

Defining Creativity• Individualist – “Creativity is a new mental

combination that is expressed in the world.”• New• Combination• Expressed in the world

Page 13: Explaining Creativity

Defining Creativity• Socio-cultural – “Creativity is the generation of a

product that is judged to be novel and also to be appropriate, useful, or valuable by a suitably knowledgeable social group.”

• Big C and Little C• Appropriate

Page 14: Explaining Creativity

The Four P Framework• Product –focuses on the products judged to be

novel and appropriate by the relevant social group

• Person – studies the personality traits and personality types associated with creativity

• Process – studies the processes involved during creative work or creative thought

• Press – focuses on the external forces or “pressures” acting on the creative person or process

Page 15: Explaining Creativity

Western Cultural Model• Belief 1. The essence of creativity is the moment of insight• Belief 2. Creative ideas emerge mysteriously from the

unconscious• Belief 3. Creativity is more likely when you reject

convention• Belief 4. Creative contributions are more likely to come

from an outsider than an expert.• Belief 5. People are more creative when they’re alone.• Belief 6. Creative ideas are ahead of their time.• Belief 7. Creativity is a personality trait.• Belief 8. Creativity is based in the right brain.• Belief 9. Creativity and mental illness are connected.• Belief 10. Creativity is a healing, life-affirming activity.

Page 16: Explaining Creativity

DEFINING CREATIVITY THROUGH ASSESSMENT

Sawyer Chapter 3

Page 17: Explaining Creativity

Introduction• 1950s and 1960s: research on

creativity emerges• Big question explored by reading –

creativity can be defined, but can it be operationalized and measured?

• Reading divided into two parts: (1) validity of tests and (2) testing for “Big C” vs. “little c” creativity

Page 18: Explaining Creativity

The Requirements of a Good Test - Validity

• Construct validity– Does the test measure the psychological

construct (aka observable behaviors) it claims to measure?• Face validity, convergent validity, discriminant

validity• Criterion validity– Does the test predict performance on some

external criterion of creative performance?• Concurrent validity & predictive validity

Page 19: Explaining Creativity

The Requirements of a Good Test - Reliability

• Reliable if test always gets the same result when applied to the same person– Three forms relevant to creativity

research:• Stability across time (test-retest reliability)• Internal consistency• Inter-rater reliability

Page 20: Explaining Creativity

Construct of Creativity• Validity & Reliability – really about

what creativity is and whether it exists at all

• If no test for creativity can be developed that’s reliable, it probably doesn’t make sense to refer to creativity as a stable trait of a person

Page 21: Explaining Creativity

Types of Creativity Tests• Ratings of the Creative Person• Ratings of the Creative Product• Self-Reports• Remote Associates Test• Creative Functioning Test

Page 22: Explaining Creativity

Templates• Principles

– FFF (functions follow form)

– The Closed World– Contradiction

• New Product Development– Attribute Dependency– Replacement– Displacement– Division– Multiplication

– Task Unification• Advertising

– Unification– Activation– Metaphor– Subtraction– Extreme consequences– Absurd Alternative– Inversion– Extreme Effort

Page 23: Explaining Creativity

Exercise Substitute a resource or component existing in the system or in its immediate neighborhood to satisfy a specific function

Page 24: Explaining Creativity

Chair Configuration

Human Body

Back

Floor

Legs

Seat

12

3

4

56

Page 25: Explaining Creativity

Now remove a component…

Human Body

BackSeat

1

4

56

???

Page 26: Explaining Creativity

What do you get?

Page 27: Explaining Creativity

Other ideas…