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mental imagery and creative problem solving, a study of 44 - Eric PDF

205 Pages·2012·5.77 MB·English
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DOCUMENT RESUME ED 393 593 PS 024 111 AUTHOR Polland, Mark J. Mental Imagery in Creative Problem Solving. TITLE PUB DATE 96 NOTE 205p.; Ph.D. Dissertation, Claremont Graduate School. PUB TYPE Dissertations/Theses Doctoral Dissertations (041) EDRS PRICE MF01/PC09 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS Artists; Authors; Creativity; *Discovery Processes; Imagination; Inventions; Musicians; *Problem Solving; *Productive Thinking; *Scientists; Spontaneous . Behavior; Visual Arts; *Visualization IDENTIFIERS *Creative Problem Solving; *Mental Imagery ABSTRACT In order to investigate the relationship between mental imagery and creative problem solving, a study of 44 separate accounts reporting mental imagery experiences associated with creative discoveries were examined. The data included 29 different scientists, among them Albert Einstein and Stephen Hawking, and 9 artists, musicians, and writers, including Leonardo da Vinci and Richard Wagner. Thirty-three of the incidents were reported by the subjects themselves, and 11 were written by biographers and historians. The study analyzed reports of mental imagery according to (1) possible causes for the reported the following three factors: (2) what perceptual modalities were perception of mental imagery; involved in the reported mental imagery; and (3) at what stage in the problem solving process imagery was reportedly involved. Findings included the following: (1) mental images occurred more often in a spontaneous way when the subjects were occupied with routine behaviors; (2) imagery that occurred in the visual modality was the single most reported factor, which may reflect the fact that the research focused on scientific fields that tend to rely on visual representations; and (3) mental imagery was reported to occur most frequently during the later stages in the creative process. Contains approximately 305 references. (AJH) *********************************************************************** Reproductions supplied by EDRS are the best that can be made * from the original document. *********************************************************************** S DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION O".ce of Eaf,cal.oriat ReSoil,C1, anc Innvovon'ent EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES INFORMATION CENTER (ERIC) This document has been reproduced as received from the person or organization originating it CI Minor changes have been made to improve reproduction quality Points 01 view or opinions stated in this document do not necessarily represent official OERI position or policy Mental Imagery in Creative Problem Solvin by Mark J. Polland A Dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Claremont Graduate School in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate Faculty of Education. Claremont, CA 1996 REPRODUCE AND Approved by: PERMISSION TO MATERIAL P1114 DISSEMINATE THIS BY HAS BEEN GRANTED kkoA nox kt. V2114 Vz-,1 RESOURCES John 0. Regan TO THE EDUCATIONAL 4 (ERIC) INFORMATION CENTER BEST COPY AVAILABLE 1 We, the undersigned, certify that we have read this dissertation and approve it as adequate in scope and quality for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Dissertation Committee: John 0. Regan, Chair Malcolm P. Douglass, Member Michael Brewster, Member Mary J. Martz, Visiting Examiner 2 I) 0 Dedication To my mother, Barbara Kay Po Hand, for her endless commitment and support. To John Regan, whose vision is a guiding light. And to my Grandmother and Grandfather, who helped to make this dream a reality. 3 0 Page # Contents Chapter 1 8 1.1 Abstract 8 9 1.2 Introduction 10 1.3 Summary 12 1.4 What are mental images? Chanter 2 16 2.1 Problems in the observation of creative behaviors 16 19 2.2 Data validation 20 2.3 Describing mental images 22 2.4 Creativity in education Chapter 3 23 23 3.1 Literature review 26 3.2 Thinking without words 27 3.3 Reports of mental imagery 27 3.3.1 Galton 29 3.3.2 Myers 4 30 3.3.3 Richardson 3.3.4 McKellar 31 3.3.5 Luria 32 34 3.4 Creative visualization 34 3.5 Mental practice 36 3.6 Mental imagery in healing c 36 3.7 Stages in the creative process Chapter 4 39 4.1 Data and analysis 39 40 4.2 Data selection criteria 4.3 Primary data 41 41 4.3.1 Oliver Evans 43 4.3.2 James Nasmyth 45 4.3.3 James Watt, part 1 49 4.3.4 Dimitri Mendeleev 52 4.3.5 Herman Hilprecht 4.3.6 Friedrich Kekule 57 64 4.3.7 Jacques Hadamard 66 4.3.8 Niko la Tesla 4.3.9 Albert Einstein, part 1 73 4.3.10 Albert Einstein, part 2 77 79 4.3.11 John Yellot 4.3.12 Omar Snyder 83 4.3.13 James Watson 85 89 4.3.14 Richard Feynman 92 4.3.15 Stephen Hawking 5 4.4 Secondary data 95 96 4.4.16 Thomas Blanchard 97 4.4.17 Niels Bohr 100 4.4.18 James Watt, part 2 102 4.4.19 Elias Howe 104 4.4.20 Michael Faraday 107 4.5 Thought experiments 108 4.5.21 Galileo Gan lei, part 1 109 4.5.22 Galileo Gall lei, part 2 110 4.5.23 Isaac Newton, part 1 112 4.5.24 Isaac Newton, part 2 113 4.5.25 James Clerk Maxwell 115 4.5.26 Henri Poincare 118 4.5.27 Albert Einstein, part 3 119 4.5.28 Albert Einstein, part 4 120 4.6 Inventors 120 4.6.29 Walter Chrysler 122 4.6.30 Flinders Petrie 124 4.6.31 A. Y. Dodge 125 4.6.32 E. Thompson 127 4.6.33 F. F. Forshee 128 4.6.34 H. A. W Wood 129 4.6.35 Seymour Cray 130 4.7 Poets, painters and composers, etc. 130 4.7.36 Samuel Taylor Coleridge 134 4.7.37 Joan Didion 134 4.7.38 Leonardo da Vinci 135 4.7.39 Max Ernst 136 4.7.40 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart 6 4.7.41 Richard Wagner 139 140 4.7.42 Guiseppe Tartini 4.7.43 Hector Berlioz 141 4.7.44 The Eskimo 143 Chanter 5 145 145 5.1 Results of analysis 5.2 Distribution results 169 171 5.3 Conclusions 5.3.1 Possible causes 171 5.3.2 Perceptual modalities 182 184 5.3.3 Stages in the creative process 5.4 Summary 187 References 189 7 Chavter 1 1.1 Abstract A number of scientists, as well as artists, musicians and writers have reported experiencing mental imagery in conjunction with significant creative discoveries. Is it possible to learn about the creative from these reported experiences? This study presents a total of 44 separate accounts reporting mental imagery experiences associated with creative discoveries. The data include 29 different scientists and 9 artists, musicians and writers. Thirty-three (33) of the incidents were reported by the subjects themselves, and 11 were written by biographers and historians. The reports were collected from research into the literature concerning "mental imagery," "the creative process," and "scientific discovery." Do these reported experiences have any characteristics in common? Do they suggest a connection between mental imagery and creative problem solving? This study analyzed reports of mental imagery according to these three factors: 1. Possible causes for the re4)orted perception of mental imagery, including behavioral, psychological and environmental factors. What was the person doing and thinking at the time? Could that behavior have facilitated the reported imagery? Were other incidents of mental imagery reported, either in association with the experience in question or not? 2. What perceptual modalities were involved in the reported mental imagery? Though mental imagery is often associated with the visual modality, it is not limited to perceptions in the visual mode (see what are mental images below). Were non-visual modalities involved? Are multiple modalities indicated? Is there a 8 of connection between the specific type of problem and the mode perception? 3. At ssh41.5.1age_In the problem solving process was imagery reportedly involved? What function did the reported mental imagery perform in facilitating the problem solving process? To what degree, if any did the reported imagery contribute to the completed solution? The purpose of the analysis is to develop a profile that outlines both the range and frequency of the data within each of three factors, insofar as it may be determined from the accounts presented. that It is possible to determine any common factors in these reports might provide insight into the creative process? Are there ways to 40 develop this kind of (reported) creative behavior, or to teach it to others? Such reports are unverifiable because they represent purely cognitive phenomena. However, the significance of the discoveries associated with the accounts of imagery presented here warrants consideration of the reported circumstances involved. 1.2 Introduction Mental imagery is more commonly associated with the arts, solving. such as painting and poetry, than with the scientific prc ilem This study documents reported incidents of mental imagery in a wider context, specifically broadening the scope to encompass the field of scientific discovery. Mental imagery has been reported in for conjunction with a number of significant discoveries. Einstein, first conceived example, reported that the Theory of Relativity was the role of mental imagery as a mental image. This study examines broader, as well as a in scientific discoveries in an effort to develop a deeper understanding of the creative process. 9 1 0

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4) Blumination is realization of the solution: the point at which the question is answered or the problem is solved. It is the experience Archimedes acknowledged
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