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EPIT
February 7th, 2011

Beeman to discuss what sparks sudden human insight in 2011 Torrance Lecture March 24

Writer: Michael Childs, 706/542-5889, mdchilds@uga.edu
Contact: Bonnie Cramond, 706/542-5104, bcramond@uga.edu

Published in EPIT, Press Releases

For the past several years, Beeman has been studying how the brain produces those sudden moments of creative insight.

One of the nation’s top researchers in cognitive neuroscience, Mark Beeman, will discuss the spark that results in sudden human insight in the 2011 E. Paul Torrance Lecture on Thursday, March 24 at the University of Georgia.

Beeman, an associate professor of psychology and head of the cognitive neuroscience program at Northwestern University, will give a lecture titled, “Insight in the Brain – The Cognitive and Neural Bases of ‘Eureka!Moments,” at 6 p.m. in the Lamar Dodd School of Art, Room S151. The event will begin with a reception at 5:30 p.m. in the first floor lobby of the new building on East Campus.

For the past several years, Beeman has been studying how the brain produces those sudden moments of creative insight.

“Most creativity occurs over extended periods of time, making it difficult to elucidate the critical cognitive and neural processes. But sometimes, while at an impasse about how to solve a problem – Eureka! – a sudden insight emerges. Such moments of sudden insight can signal and isolate some of the critical components of creative cognition,” he said.

Although insight seems to occur suddenly, the Eureka! moment is the culmination of cognitive processes and internal states that facilitate the insight – from rapidly changing preparatory states to relatively stable individual differences in brain states that influence problem-solving style, he said.

“Furthermore, the processes and neural activity that lead to insight solutions are modulated by mood and attention. Based on these results, I present a framework of cognitive and neural mechanisms supporting insight and at least some aspects of creative cognition,” he said.

In a recently completed study, Beeman found that people were more likely to solve word puzzles with sudden insight when they were amused, having just seen a short comedy routine.

“What we think is happening,” Beeman said in recent New York Times article, is that the humor, this positive mood, is lowering the brain’s threshold for detecting weaker or more remote connections to solve puzzles.”

The lecture is free and open to all UGA faculty, students, staff and the general public.

The E. Paul Torrance Lecture annually brings scholars to UGA to discuss research and issues concerned with creativity. It was established in 1985 in honor of Torrance, a native Georgian and pioneer in research on the identification and development of creative potential. He is most noted for the development of the Torrance Test of Creative Thinking, which is still used worldwide.

The lecture is sponsored by the College of Education’s Torrance Center for Creativity and Talent Development, which was established in 1984 by the late UGA educational psychology professor Mary Frasier, to continue the tradition of scholarship and excellence exemplified in Torrance’s work.

See the New York Times article:
http://nyti.ms/ebxNBX

See 2011 E. Paul Torrance Lecture featuring Mark Beeman on the COE Lecture Series Podcast channel or on the UGA channel on YouTube.

For more information on the Torrance Center, visit:
www.coe.uga.edu/torrance/

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