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Psychopathology and Creative CognitionA Comparison of Hospitalized Patients, Nobel Laureates, and Controls
Albert Rothenberg, MD
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 1983;40(9):937-942.
Abstract
To assess a tendency to rapid opposite responding associated with the type of creative cognition called janusian thinking, timed word association tests were administered to 12 creative scientists who were Nobel laureates, 18 hospitalized patients, and 113 college students divided as controls into high and low creative groups. Nobel laureates gave the highest proportion of opposite responses at the fastest rate of all groups, whereas patients gave the lowest proportion of opposite responses at the slowest rate. Both Nobel laureates and high creative students gave opposite responses at a significantly faster rate than they gave common, popular (nonopposite) responses, and their average speed of opposite response was fast enough to indicate that conceptualizing opposites could have been simultaneous. The results support the connection between janusian thinking and creativity and indicate a distinction between creative and psychopathologic cognitive modes.
Author Affiliations
From the Austen Riggs Center, Stockbridge, Mass.
Footnotes
Accepted for publication Dec 27, 1982.
Reprint requests to Austen Riggs Center, Stockbridge, MA 01262 (Dr Rothenberg).
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ABSTRACT
Psychopathology and Creative Cognition
Alias
Arch Gen Psychiatry 1984;41:721-721.
ABSTRACT
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