2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2015.01.034
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Creativity and sensory gating indexed by the P50: Selective versus leaky sensory gating in divergent thinkers and creative achievers

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Cited by 92 publications
(91 citation statements)
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References 51 publications
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“…Although the present experiments did not test this directly, such a mechanism is compatible with our recent data showing that divergent thinking is linked with an increased ability to filter out "irrelevant" sensory information (Zabelina et al, 2015). Considering the manner in which divergent thinking tests are typically administered (limited time and emphasis on the number of responses), selective attention would appear to facilitate successful performance on divergent thinking tests.…”
Section: Congruent Trial Incongruent Trialsupporting
confidence: 84%
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“…Although the present experiments did not test this directly, such a mechanism is compatible with our recent data showing that divergent thinking is linked with an increased ability to filter out "irrelevant" sensory information (Zabelina et al, 2015). Considering the manner in which divergent thinking tests are typically administered (limited time and emphasis on the number of responses), selective attention would appear to facilitate successful performance on divergent thinking tests.…”
Section: Congruent Trial Incongruent Trialsupporting
confidence: 84%
“…In direct contrast to creative achievement, divergent thinking is associated with increased ability to filter out "irrelevant" sensory information, as assessed by the P50 ERP (Zabelina et al, 2015). Specifically, we find that high divergent thinkers are more likely to filter out sensory stimuli than their less divergent counterparts.…”
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confidence: 52%
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