Secrets of the Creative Brain

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  • čas přidán 17. 07. 2014
  • Nancy Andreasen is a leading neuroscientist and psychiatrist at the University of Iowa whose fascinating research into the creative mind has been informed in part by the stream of remarkable writers who gather there. She is now conducting a study that uses neuroimaging to visualize the creative brain in action, examining both artists and scientists. Her work also examines the roles of nature v. nurture and the relationship between creativity and mental illness.

Komentáře • 87

  • @theelectric8548
    @theelectric8548 Před 2 lety +12

    This learned woman is direct, clear, and without the fluff. No pomp & circumstance. Just a sheer joy to follow the entire lecture.

  • @robertemerson6090
    @robertemerson6090 Před 2 lety +7

    It's so wonderfull to hear about nourishing and turbulent minds from someone with a poetic heart and a steady bearing.💛

  • @AA-lq5pu
    @AA-lq5pu Před 9 měsíci +2

    I once started to learn Mathemagics and had to practice the multiplication time table. That night I suddenly had an amazing increase in my ability to imagine complex dance moves etc. There was a definite and noticable improvement. Very pleasurable.

  • @toddklumb7855
    @toddklumb7855 Před 3 lety +12

    I am a teacher. Her points are almost entirely on point. I disagree with the educational theory stated in this lecture in the sequence of creating structure before the "eureka moment". That describes our current educational system that limits the students who are more capable of generating the best ideas. The lecturer dismisses these students because they don't follow through with the entire process. Educators need to structure this process, understanding that we all have of our specialties in the creative process. I believe that education should be centered around the students best at the "eureka moment". Then you work to develop the structure around that idea. Otherwise, you are ignoring the people who generate progress, and society becomes less creative and more of a standardized paradigm. Our current "assembly line" culture what the lecturer describes as learning the standards first would benefit this structure but we desperately need to move away from that concept. There is no motivation for creative people or anyone to learn standards if there is no "big picture" generated by the "eureka moment". People who are better at learning the structure first lack the critical thinking skills to start the progress and usually copy someone else's idea and often not the best idea. Maybe all these highly creative people she describes are depressed because the way our society responds to creativity is so backward.

    • @katc6812
      @katc6812 Před 3 lety +3

      As both a scholar and creatively minded. You absolutely are correct. This is why I chose to study sociology. I despise this acceptance of abarent intelligence. I like to think creativity leads to evolution. Traditional education is a standardize catastrophe.

    • @Dhvile
      @Dhvile Před rokem

      Does schizophrenia and psychosis have affect with creativity?

    • @CestLePanda
      @CestLePanda Před 11 měsíci +1

      Wow, you read my mind. Right when she got into the 4 step creativity process theory and led into productivity as the last mandatory stage that either confirms or negates wether someone is legitimately creative. For a moment I thought no, maybe I'm projecting and taking this personally, let me stop. Lol... but no. You really said it very well. I was just thinking about the very big obstacle that plagues people with very active, creative minds that also have a bigger picture motivating the process that tends to think more towards the greater intellectual, moral, and empathetic good of our societies... and that is the doozy. There's a very big level of internal consequences that arise throughout this type of mentality. There's a deep sadness that can become crippling on so many personal levels in a current world that mocks and constantly invalidates the ideas and efforts of people that think this way in favor of short term goals that seek instant, shallow, and material models of success , which are in the long run highly detrimental to society's stability and well- being. Not only are these standards not good, they have catastrophic consequences in all aspects of our lives.

    • @CestLePanda
      @CestLePanda Před 11 měsíci

      @@Dhvile they very, very often have overlaps in the lives of highly creative individuals but they are not necessarily always present. So yes, but it's important to clarify that it's not a given aspect of the mental health of creative people.

    • @virginiadavidson7862
      @virginiadavidson7862 Před 6 měsíci

      Thank you for this perspective.
      I resonate, from my own experience, with its clarity.
      My early education was first at home (Mother was a teacher) then at a tiny country school. Next, it was "alternate education" where well-meaning people tried to squeeze me into the box of their expectations...but somehow there was always enough latitude to learn and develop what I needed.
      Creative? I would think so. As a young teenager I was discovering patterns and connections between ideas, and synthesizing new concepts. I still write--and have been published.
      Also, during the past 30 years I've designed and built many custom stained glass windows--and still there are fresh ideas of things to make. It's who I am.
      I'm grateful.

  • @myfragilelilac
    @myfragilelilac Před 4 lety +4

    To see a world in a grain of sand. Short yet accurate explanation!

  • @cbparker44
    @cbparker44 Před 7 lety +7

    Very wonderful lady, and a wonderful speech. Thanks for posting :)

  • @BillZebubproductions
    @BillZebubproductions Před 5 lety +3

    Thank you for posting this. I enjoyed it immensely.

  • @stratovation1474
    @stratovation1474 Před 2 měsíci

    I know people who are creative in technical fields and also in art music writing. They tend to be open minded and also have a sense of irony, open to different interpretations. Quite refreshing...

  • @claudiasmaletz6213
    @claudiasmaletz6213 Před 3 lety +1

    Infusing poetry throughout your speech clarified creativity in a unique way, thank-you.

  • @mileddeman4861
    @mileddeman4861 Před 2 lety +3

    Great understandable lecture, also for beginners. Hope to hear more from her.

  • @AA-lq5pu
    @AA-lq5pu Před 9 měsíci +2

    I have created beautiful art and music however I never feel like I created it. Very frustrating! I start and somehow it gets created, its not something I planned, I just do something look at the feedback then adjust accordingly. Its almost as if it makes itself but with my help! Like you are opening a present and everything just unfolds and I feel like an imposter because I don't know how I did it and I can't recreate it.

    • @meeshapip4409
      @meeshapip4409 Před 5 měsíci

      You have something moving through you. And it does come from your perception of the world. It is the truth through your hands. Embrace that because it is a beautiful blessing. Imo

    • @AA-lq5pu
      @AA-lq5pu Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@meeshapip4409 Thank you so much! I appreciate the encouragement! Thinking about it now, you are right , it probably does come from perception since I created the most beautiful art after extreme suffering of abandonment during a debilitating illness. I express and heal my pain through art. It's very effective.

  • @gayesekula
    @gayesekula Před 4 lety

    Wonderfully enlightening. Thank you.

  • @AbelBlog
    @AbelBlog Před 8 lety +24

    Creativity is the ability of taking things apart and putting them together mentally. Real creativity is intuitive; it all happens within. People can also attain to the product of creativity in a non intuitive approach. That creativity is empirical; it depends on external factors; like something you saw, heard,... And empirical creativity is attain usually through hard work. The more you work, the more you increase your chances of coming in contact with some factor that will inspire you to create. Coming back to real creativity; intuitive creativity, it doesn't depend on how hard working you are, it is usually expressed without working hard; it's the result of having a great imagination. That's the creativity geniuses have; that's what make them do great complex things at an early age without struggling. Most people are creative because they work hard; that's empirical! Real creative people (like geniuses) work hard because they are creative; that's intuitive!
    Now it's important to distinguish between artist and scientist. Many artist operate with empirical creativity. The creation is affected a lot by he concrete world; things they see, hear, smell, touch...
    So in reality, most artist are not really creative in the intuitive way.
    But scientists on the other hand, have little chance to come across something in the concrete world that will inspire them to create. The more a scientist advances in his field, the less he can rely on external factors for creativity. That calls for a great ability for intuitive creativity. So the real creative people would be likely found among abstract mathematicians, theoretical physicists, ....
    I would bet that a pure scientist would be a better musician if he could take time to invest his creativity in it.
    People who have intuitive creativity tend to be polymaths (creative at many things).

    • @836247
      @836247 Před 6 lety +3

      Great. If we bring the Myers Briggs or Jungian psychology, the empirical creativity would be extroverted sensation: the awareness of the world the way it is, being in the moment, and an artist with this function in first or second position on their stack would translate what they saw in the world, exactly how they saw it. No symbols, no hidden meanings, just the aesthetic appeal as they saw it. But an artist with extroverted intuition would take a bit from the real world, process that data as a raw material through his psyche, make associations with it with different abstract concepts. In the end the finished painting would have hidden meanings, may or may not have aesthetic appeal. An artist like this would be Salvador Dhali, who was in the Myers Briggs type indicator an ENFP. His first function being extroverted intuition. Oh and all abstract painters too are all intuitive.

    • @Longformula
      @Longformula Před 5 lety

      I just made a video on art and Depression if you are interested.
      Signed, a formerly very sad artist !!!
      ( A.k.a Jaunty, The Recluse Queen)
      czcams.com/video/gyCKZ68pGgs/video.html

    • @AdamFraserTv
      @AdamFraserTv Před 3 lety

      Perfect 👌🏻

    • @strelingowen7232
      @strelingowen7232 Před měsícem

      Blaah blaah , give credit to musicians , that’s talent .

  • @YuriRadavchuk
    @YuriRadavchuk Před 8 lety +3

    Wonderful lady and a wonderful lecture.

  • @aaronjclarke1973
    @aaronjclarke1973 Před 3 měsíci

    As a paranoid schizophrenic I wish to thank you for your invaluable work.

  • @JoeM370
    @JoeM370 Před 6 měsíci

    The wisdom in this content is a beacon. A book I read with related subjects was a pivotal influence on me. "Adapting with Aging" by James Crescent

  • @t_s_q
    @t_s_q Před 8 měsíci

    Thank you so much for sharing these insights

  • @jackteare8292
    @jackteare8292 Před 3 lety

    Enjoyable and informative, all the best everyone.

  • @sallys9643
    @sallys9643 Před 7 lety +1

    thank u it nice lecture action n word if u feel great when u enjoy it while u find yaself too

  • @achatinaslak742
    @achatinaslak742 Před 4 lety +1

    Maybe creativity is to let the audience sing Starry Night, if the audio is broken. It is a well known song, I think a lot of people can sing it, or hum it. And thanks a lot for this very interesting video, I enjoyed it from beginning till the end.

  • @Idellphany
    @Idellphany Před 2 měsíci

    Thank you

  • @janjohnson7071
    @janjohnson7071 Před 4 lety +4

    You may think I’m crazy, and you’re probably right, I don’t know a lot about schizophrenia only a little, my Grandma has it, my daughter had episodes of it and I suffered psychosis a few times. I think that creative people have so much going on that they form their own families of archetypes to figure out stuff and to try and organise thoughts. As you know, thought patterns become comforting and comfortable so it can become a thought trap. But I may have this wrong 🤷‍♀️🌺

    • @zachschroeder1740
      @zachschroeder1740 Před 6 měsíci

      Na ur right don’t drive yourself nuts lol
      As humans we always haven’t had advanced language
      But as we look throughout history, we see an increase in so called “mad people”
      These days I mean , enough of a negative emotion, or a traumatic experience, substance abuse, or anything other could cause “madness” or even just creative thoughts in general.
      But another idea is that people with adhd (I have adhd), have a tendency to be creative, and that’s what lead me to this video

  • @xjyang001
    @xjyang001 Před rokem

    This is highly informative!

  • @eloisesjohnson28
    @eloisesjohnson28 Před rokem

    you are very good!!

  • @theelectric8548
    @theelectric8548 Před 2 lety

    I must comment on the shirt. That is a work of art.

  • @sallys9643
    @sallys9643 Před 7 lety +1

    nature is important brain need that it free each human is to connect science is not exactly my cup of tea but it cool to bring more about helping with earth mind spirit it creating joy to with ideas of desire of heart or brain or spirit if u can write this i like to hear more but hearing impair just help me to relate to your ideas of thinking n i hope u put in close caption so people have diffrent ideas creativity ..i like poems i like to open my mind it beautiful n we all have vibes n environment...people n animals plants all part of healing

  • @AA-lq5pu
    @AA-lq5pu Před 9 měsíci

    I would lay down at night to images flashing at rapid speed in front of my eyes, but it never felt like I was generating them. All effortless. I have not experienced it after Covid. Covid effected my brain, I was so depressed that I was no longer getting the dopamine fix I got from creating.

  • @l.w.paradis2108
    @l.w.paradis2108 Před 2 lety +2

    Did anyone used to say J. P. Morgan, Carnegie, or Rockefeller were highly creative? Ask yourself why it is obligatory to say that about Gates, Jobs, or Zuckerberg.

  • @tookclosely5480
    @tookclosely5480 Před 8 lety

    wonderful

  • @besthasekhar8732
    @besthasekhar8732 Před 6 lety

    Madam you done great job

  • @LEXI-jv2xn
    @LEXI-jv2xn Před 7 lety +1

    👌

  • @sallys9643
    @sallys9643 Před 7 lety

    natural it will only be used inside it come from the heart

  • @capitosinora
    @capitosinora Před 7 lety +10

    IQ is a measure of conformity and it has little to do with creativity.
    IQ tests can not measure creativity.

    • @ExistNNature
      @ExistNNature Před 4 lety +1

      I agree, was thinking the same thing.

  • @HoratioTalbot771_a
    @HoratioTalbot771_a Před 3 lety +2

    Van Gogh was really thought to have epilepsy and he could control his outrageous fits. Is epilepsy considered a mental illness ?

  • @l.w.paradis2108
    @l.w.paradis2108 Před 2 lety +1

    Making a majority of young people take on debt for education before age 25 will squelch creativity. You see this already.

  • @floatingchimney
    @floatingchimney Před 2 lety

    41:37 It says "Mark Zuckerman" instead of "Zuckerberg" LOL!

  • @dantegreciante7984
    @dantegreciante7984 Před rokem

    Had the funniest thought while looking at a coffee table and a fan. What if you had gears at your base and each of the three legs move and walk. It's nonsense but you could move it by wobbling that the first leg moves a few cms above and to the side and a third of the quarter way, the leading leg goes up and then the second leg does it too but due to the imbalance you would create you would need it to move very small teeny tiny moves and it will look like an oompa loompa coffee table and add a speaker and while it does it it plays the songs the oompa loompa does and it makes it 10x funnier in my mind. Just sharing. Couldn't stop laughing otherwise.

  • @laurieberry162
    @laurieberry162 Před rokem

    Roger

    • @laurieberry162
      @laurieberry162 Před rokem

      Roger Meyer. Remember him. He had an intellectual disability. He was picked on because of it. He’s a little famous for being a poet. There’s a movie about him. Sean Cassidy played him. I believe the movie is called, Almost Normal.

  • @susankoralewicz5
    @susankoralewicz5 Před rokem +1

    I have a comment about the movie or book the lord of the ring maybe it's 🤔 happened all the super powers globally are fighting to control the world trying to find the key that control the world the key is imaginary it means a key speaker and the folk lord song one sholger rids away turns the stone and looks beneath peace on earth thats all it says !!

  • @missfeliss3628
    @missfeliss3628 Před 2 lety +1

    I beg to differ.... Preparedness is often something prodiges don't have... They just start doing their thing at two or three without any accumulation of the knowledge... Preparedness is for the non genius.... Also.... U r a creative person if u don't produce anything... It just means u don't help humanity much ,but ur brain is still a creative brain... Has nothing to do with what u accomplish or produce!!!! Producing is for the masses , lady! !! Ideas r enuf!!!! Einstien just had ideas basically

  • @bollweevil8112
    @bollweevil8112 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Seems like she’s a little bit biased towards famous & accomplished people.
    She completely loses me at 9:26
    “You may have a lot of insights, but if you don’t put them into action then you’re not a creative person “

  • @AbCDef-zs6uj
    @AbCDef-zs6uj Před 6 lety +2

    No offense to the University of Iowa, but I feel like Nancy Andreasen should really be somewhere more prestigious. Maybe she simply isn't interested in moving due to family and friends.

    • @stap0510
      @stap0510 Před 5 lety +4

      That is condescending towards the University of Iowa.

  • @Sherlockarim
    @Sherlockarim Před 4 lety

    38:48 WTF! that's what i call modesty LOL.

  • @michaelmcilrath9466
    @michaelmcilrath9466 Před rokem

    To start a lecture on creativity, using hollowed out old cliche’s is ironic!

  • @Stretesky
    @Stretesky Před rokem +1

    People are creative regardless if they express it visually or outwardly. We can tell this through brain imaging. I’ve heard several false claims in this lecture. Be skeptical.

  • @trs_4612
    @trs_4612 Před 3 lety

    I’m creative and it’s true. When I was under 6, I went to the zoo and I was utterly sad feeding elephants. Yep cause they r kept in shitty cages. I also taught myself to ride a bike by holding onto a window.

  • @missfeliss3628
    @missfeliss3628 Před 2 lety +2

    Clearly this lady is not creative herself lmfao... Doesn't quite get it

    • @liongrose1173
      @liongrose1173 Před 2 lety +1

      Lecturing does not need creativity.. It seems anybody can teach or lecture

  • @TamsinJones
    @TamsinJones Před 4 lety +1

    Strongly disagree with her claim that the world is a self-organising system at about 20:20 into the lecture! The world is arranged according to the Golden Rule: they that have the gold, make the rules. This obtains ever more and more.

    • @katc6812
      @katc6812 Před 3 lety

      Yuck...

    • @manumusicmist
      @manumusicmist Před 3 lety

      She said the brain is a self organizing structure. Not the world.

  • @oskarwinters1873
    @oskarwinters1873 Před 4 lety +2

    This glorifies mental illness and continues the stereotype that artist have to be depressed to be great....terrible message in this lecture.

    • @Alice-si8uz
      @Alice-si8uz Před 4 lety +5

      I don't think she ever said: "artists have to be depressed to be great". All she was saying is that there is an increased rate of mental illness in people who are highly creative either in art or science. She did say however that there is a difference between having traits that make you odd and help with what your doing (referring to the part of the video where she talks about OCD), having the disorder and struggling to function and being completely debilitated by the disorder. She also clearly stated it is not easy for those with it or their family so she is in no way glorifying it all she is saying is you don't need to stigmatise it, which is probably worse in a lot of ways since if you do they may not be able/want to use their creativity for the benefit of society.
      Also, consider she is saying as someone who has studied for years in neuroscience, psychiatry and such so understands what she is talking about.

    • @liongrose1173
      @liongrose1173 Před 2 lety +1

      It is not glorification. Yet its a fact.
      But we sadly admit that creativity does come with mental illness in some people tho not all...

  • @lesliecunliffe4450
    @lesliecunliffe4450 Před 2 lety

    There is no such thing as the 'creative brain'. It is the embodied person who is creative, thinks, acts, etc, not brains. Try being creative without a body as nested in a community, which in Vygotsky's thinking equates with the 'social within'. This talk is nonsense on stilts.