The Next Idea: Creativity and Innovation

Creative thinking tools, articles on creativity, free creativity events, ideas and innovation.

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Andre is Co-Director of the Creativity Institute. He is an engineer, inventor, author, and seminar leader. He has facilitated "Creative-Innovation" projects at AT&T, Bell Labs, Ogilvy and Mathers, United Technologies, Federal Reserve and the DOD. He is the author of The Creative Genius Book, Zingers, TRIZ - 40 Principles of Inventing, Instant Selling and has co-authored the creativity chapter in The Advertising Managers Handbook (1997) and The Tao of Living on Purpose (1998). Andre is creator of INVENTIUM ® Card Game and the inventor of the "Flasher" (an anti-theft auto device), and the co-creator of the "Creativity Machine", a creativity computer software program. We have come across some fascinating “WOW” ideas on Creativity, Science, Philosophy, Sociology and Psychology, that we thought you might find interesting and useful in your life. Consider yourself a member of the new “WOW Idea” club. E-mail us at creativityinstitute@juno.com

Thursday, July 15, 2010

WOW IDEA #13 Golden Circle, Blue-Dot, Rembrandt

1. HOW GREAT LEADERS INSPIRE ACTION (The GOLDEN CIRCLE)

Simon Sinek has a simple but powerful model for inspirational leadership all starting with a GOLDEN CIRCLE. Ordinary people and companies use the ordinary strategy of What-How-Why. Extraordinary people and companies use the extra-ordinary strategy of Why-How-What. His examples include Apple, Martin Luther King, and the Wright brothers – verses the failure of Tivo.

http://www.ted.com/talks/simon_sinek_how_great_leaders_inspire_action.html (18 mins)


2. THE WORLD WOULD BE BETTER IF EVERYONE WATCHED THIS VIDEO
Carl Sagen shows us the world from space (the Blue-Dot) and how we live on it.
http://gizmodo.com/5513783/the-world-would-be-better-if-everyone-watched-this-video


3. RESEARCHER DECODES REMBRANDT'S 'MAGIC'

A University of British Columbia researcher has uncovered what makes Rembrandt's masterful portraits so appealing. New research suggests that Rembrandt may have pioneered a technique that guides the viewer's gaze around a portrait, creating a special narrative and "calmer" viewing experience.)
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/05/100528092019.htm

Images of the Rembrandt-like portraits and original photographs are available at http://www.dipaola.org/rembrandt


4. HOW LIGHT BULBS MAKE YOU SMARTER

By Tom Bartlett http://chronicle.com/blogPost/How-Light-Bulbs-Make-You/23292/
An illuminated light bulb is the universal symbol for having an idea. Anyone who has read the comics, or noticed the icon for an ideas blog (see right side of screen), is well aware of that.

But can looking at a light bulb actually improve insight?

It seems like a ridiculous question to ask, but it's in line with a number of other experiments demonstrating how behavior or performance can be "primed" by showing participants certain objects. For instance, in a 2004 paper, researchers reported that people who were shown objects associated with business, like briefcases, became more competitive. This may explain why people who wear backpacks are such losers.

Anyway, in a recent study, participants were asked to perform a number of tasks including, for example, connecting four dots with straight lines without lifting their pencils or retracing a line. After assigning the task, the researchers then either did or did not switch on an exposed light bulb in the room. When they switched on the bulb, more participants (44 percent) solved the puzzle in the allotted time, compared with 22 percent of the bulbless control group.

So, you might object, maybe the subjects just needed more light? To account for that, the researchers tried experiments with shaded light bulbs, but found that those didn't improve the results. They also checked to see whether the light was affecting people's moods -- perhaps happier people are better at puzzles -- but found no correlation there either. To quote from the paper: "The results of four studies suggest that exposure to an illuminating lightbulb primes bright ideas."

However, flipping on a light bulb didn't help with "non-insight" tasks, like algebra problems.

The moral: If you want to have better ideas, get rid of your lampshades.

(The paper, published in the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, can be read here. The researchers who had this bright idea were Michael L. Slepian, Max Weisbuch, Abraham M. Rutchick, Leonard S. Newman, and Nalini Ambady.)



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