Two's Company: How Academic Diversity in Dyads Enhances Divergent Thinking

IF 2.8 2区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, EDUCATIONAL
Xiaochen Liu, Gregory T. Boldt, Donald J. Leu, James C. Kaufman
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Abstract

Group diversity is an active topic in research as studies examine how differences in background, culture, job position, gender, and ethnicity can all impact group creativity. One relatively overlooked component is how diversity in academic knowledge affects group and individual creativity. In this study, 56 graduate students from a research university in the United States were paired into a dyad with another academically similar or diverse student. They then took the Alternate Uses Test (AUT) alone, as a team, and then alone again. The AUT was used to obtain three divergent thinking scores—fluency, flexibility, and originality. The scores were analyzed to determine if graduate students in academically diverse dyads worked better together (and, subsequently, alone) compared to academically similar dyads. The results showed that academically diverse dyads had significantly higher scores on originality for both increases in individual task scores and the team creativity task, as well as higher fluency scores compared to academically similar dyads. In addition, the results suggest that academically similar and diverse dyads demonstrate varying patterns of fluency and originality scores over time. Results indicated that embracing academic diversity can lead to both dyads and, subsequently, individuals being more productive in generating novel ideas.

两个人的公司:二人组的学术多样性如何增强发散思维
群体多样性是研究中的一个活跃话题,因为研究考察了背景、文化、工作职位、性别和种族的差异如何影响群体创造力。一个相对被忽视的因素是学术知识的多样性如何影响群体和个人的创造力。在这项研究中,来自美国一所研究型大学的56名研究生与另一名学术相似或不同的学生配对。然后他们作为一个团队单独进行了替代用途测试(AUT),然后又单独进行了一次。使用AUT获得三个发散性思维得分:流利性、灵活性和独创性。研究人员对这些分数进行了分析,以确定与学术相似的两组相比,学术不同的两组研究生在一起(以及随后的单独)是否表现得更好。结果显示,与学术相似的二组相比,学术不同的二组在个人任务得分和团队创造力任务得分上的独创性得分都明显更高,而且流畅性得分也更高。此外,研究结果表明,随着时间的推移,学术上相似和不同的组合在流利性和独创性得分方面表现出不同的模式。研究结果表明,接受学术多样性可以导致双方,随后,个人在产生新想法方面更有成效。
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来源期刊
Journal of Creative Behavior
Journal of Creative Behavior Arts and Humanities-Visual Arts and Performing Arts
CiteScore
7.50
自引率
7.70%
发文量
44
期刊介绍: The Journal of Creative Behavior is our quarterly academic journal citing the most current research in creative thinking. For nearly four decades JCB has been the benchmark scientific periodical in the field. It provides up to date cutting-edge ideas about creativity in education, psychology, business, arts and more.
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