In particular, classical music that ranks highly for positive and
energetic qualities, such as pieces composed by Antonio Vivaldi,
were most likely to encourage creative thinking, researchers found.
“Creativity is one of the core skills needed for dealing with a
world that is changing faster than ever before,” said study coauthor
Sam Ferguson of the University of Technology in Sydney, Australia.
“Knowledge about ways to facilitate this important skill is becoming
more critical,” he told Reuters Health by email.
Ferguson and Simone Ritter of Radboud University Nijmegen played
classical music for 155 Radboud student volunteers as they completed
a creativity task. The researchers split the students into five
groups, with each group randomly assigned to listen to one of four
pieces of music or to silence before and during their creativity
tasks.
The music pieces were chosen for their mood and arousal levels. The
Swan by Camille Saint-Saens represented a positive mood but low
arousal level, thus a calm piece of music. Vivaldi’s The Four
Seasons was the happy piece, Adagio for Strings by Samuel Barber was
the sad, slow piece and The Planets: Mars, Bringer of War by Gustav
Holst was used as a negative, arousing - in other words, anxious -
piece.
To test creativity, the research team focused mainly on divergent
thinking, which involves producing multiple answers from available
information by making unexpected combinations, recognizing
associations among ideas and transforming information into
unexpected forms. Divergent thinking is key to today’s scientific,
technological and cultural fields because innovation often pairs
disparate ideas, the authors write in PLoS ONE.
“One thing to point out is that divergent thinking is not equivalent
to creative thinking, but it’s a proxy measure often used in
research,” said Rex Jung of the University of New Mexico in
Albuquerque, who wasn’t involved with the study.
Ferguson and Ritter asked participants to list as many different and
creative uses for a common object as possible, in this case, a
brick. They also tested convergent thinking, which measures whether
someone can come up with the best, well-established or correct
answer to a problem when the answer already exists.
Answers were then scored by the number, quality, creativity,
originality and usefulness of the ideas. The students were also
asked about their moods before the test began, as well as how much
they liked the music.
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The research team found that the students’ moods before the test
didn’t seem to make a difference in their creativity in the task. It
also didn’t matter how much they liked the music or how familiar
they were with the music.
Overall, the type of music did not make a significant difference in
performance on the creativity test, compared to silence, with the
exception of happy music. Happy music also appeared to make the most
difference in divergent thinking but not in convergent thinking.
“Music is such an important part of everyday life, and it could be a
potential avenue for fostering creativity in education and the
workplace,” Jung told Reuters Health in a phone interview. “Even if
people don’t play it themselves, they can appreciate it.”
The small number of participants and the fact that most were women
are limitations of the study, Jung added. Factors such as gender,
age, education level and socioeconomic status could influence how
music affects creative thinking.
Future studies should further investigate how familiarity with and
enjoyment of music affects creativity as well, the study authors
write.
Inherent skill and aptitude are also important to study in relation
to creativity, Jung noted. He and others are researching how visual,
spatial and musical abilities intersect with creativity.
“If you have perfect pitch or tonal rhythm, are you more likely to
be creative and more likely to pursue a creative field?” he asked.
“And which abilities are most important to STEM careers in science,
technology, engineering and math?”
Jung tells his patients that listening to music for creativity is
similar to taking medication for depression. "Medication can set the
tone in your brain to do the hard work you have to do when talking
to your therapist. Similarly, putting on music won’t make you more
creative, but it can set the stage to help you.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2gPJIfb PLoS ONE, online September 6, 2017.
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