Recalling Ideas: Mnemonic and Attentional Inhibition in Creativity Analytic Code
Abstract
Executive functions (updating, shifting and inhibition) play an important role in creativity. Until now, only attentional inhibition (the Stroop effect) but not mnemonic inhibition (Thinking-Induced Forgetting, TIF) were studied. Additionally, the temporal dynamics of the influence of the executive functions on creativity remains unknown. Using structural equation modelling and multilevel models, the relationships between both types of inhibition with creative thinking, as well as their temporal dynamics, were tested on a sample of 300. Mnemonic and attentional inhibition were shown to be independently associated with originality of thinking. Memory inhibition was found to be more important in the later phases of generating ideas, while attentional inhibition was equally important throughout the idea-generation process, consistent with the predictions of the attentional theory of creativity. An interaction between both types of inhibition was also observed, indicating that attentional inhibition may be a prerequisite for memory inhibition, while the combination of both types of inhibition results in the highest efficiency of creative thinking.