info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Music expertise and gender differences in verbal and visual divergent thinking: A behavioral study
Fecha
2021-07-20Registro en:
Diaz Abrahan, Veronika Mariana; Sarli, Leticia Ileana; Shifres, Favio Demian; Justel, Nadia; Music expertise and gender differences in verbal and visual divergent thinking: A behavioral study; Routledge Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd; Creativity Research Journal; 33; 3; 20-7-2021; 235-245
1040-0419
1532-6934
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Diaz Abrahan, Veronika Mariana
Sarli, Leticia Ileana
Shifres, Favio Demian
Justel, Nadia
Resumen
Research on creativity is a field of great relevance since it studies our capacity to create, the root of all innovation and problem solving. Some factors, like personality, motivation and artistic knowledge, are known to influence creativity. The aim of this study was to investigate the influence of music expertise and gender on creativity and the interaction between these factors. One hundredand fifty-eight participants, aged between 18 and 50, were involved in the study. Eighty-seven ofthem were musicians (56 male and 31 female) and 71 non-musicians (30 male and 41 female). Toevaluate creativity, two tasks, one verbal and one visual, were used, each lasting 2 minutes. Fluency, Flexibility, Originality, Elaboration, and General Creativity were the creative domains under evaluation. The results showed statistically significant differences in music expertise and, to a lesser extent, in gender, especially in the verbal task. Music expertise had a positive impact on creative performance, and women were found to be more creative in the verbal domain than men. This research extends previous work on the influence of biological and environmental factors on creativity.