“…Control tasks involving similar or overlapping processes to visual creative tasks facilitate examination of the brain regions and cognitive processes that may be engaged to a relatively greater degree in tasks drawing on visual creativity (Abraham, ). Visual creativity is thought to differ from nonvisual creativity (e.g., generation of verbal or musical creative outputs), and visual noncreative tasks (e.g., generation of mental imagery from memory) in which visual image generation, manipulation, and evaluation are engaged to a greater extent (Finke, ; Gansler et al., ; Kozhevnikov et al., ; Palmiero, Nori, Aloisi, Ferrara, & Piccardi, ). Based on previous neuroimaging studies of visual imagery, visual creativity may engage regions linked to these functions, including early visual cortex, fusiform, V5/MT, posterior parietal cortex, and bilateral inferior frontal cortex (Kosslyn & Thompson, ; Mazard, Tzourio‐Mazoyer, Crivello, Mazoyer, & Mellet, ; see Tomasino & Gremese, , for meta‐analysis).…”