Divergent and Convergent Creativity Relate to Different Aspects of Semantic Control

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Divergent and Convergent Creativity Relate to Different Aspects of Semantic Control. / Krieger-Redwood, Katya Melanie; Lanzoni, Lucilla; Gonzalez Alam, Tirso RJ et al.
In: Imaging Neuroscience, 20.02.2025.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Krieger-Redwood, KM, Lanzoni, L, Gonzalez Alam, TRJ, Jackson, RL, Smallwood, J & Jefferies, E 2025, 'Divergent and Convergent Creativity Relate to Different Aspects of Semantic Control', Imaging Neuroscience. https://doi.org/10.1162/imag_a_00502

APA

Krieger-Redwood, K. M., Lanzoni, L., Gonzalez Alam, T. RJ., Jackson, R. L., Smallwood, J., & Jefferies, E. (2025). Divergent and Convergent Creativity Relate to Different Aspects of Semantic Control. Imaging Neuroscience. https://doi.org/10.1162/imag_a_00502

CBE

Krieger-Redwood KM, Lanzoni L, Gonzalez Alam TRJ, Jackson RL, Smallwood J, Jefferies E. 2025. Divergent and Convergent Creativity Relate to Different Aspects of Semantic Control. Imaging Neuroscience. https://doi.org/10.1162/imag_a_00502

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Krieger-Redwood KM, Lanzoni L, Gonzalez Alam TRJ, Jackson RL, Smallwood J, Jefferies E. Divergent and Convergent Creativity Relate to Different Aspects of Semantic Control. Imaging Neuroscience. 2025 Feb 20. doi: 10.1162/imag_a_00502

Author

Krieger-Redwood, Katya Melanie ; Lanzoni, Lucilla ; Gonzalez Alam, Tirso RJ et al. / Divergent and Convergent Creativity Relate to Different Aspects of Semantic Control. In: Imaging Neuroscience. 2025.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Divergent and Convergent Creativity Relate to Different Aspects of Semantic Control

AU - Krieger-Redwood, Katya Melanie

AU - Lanzoni, Lucilla

AU - Gonzalez Alam, Tirso RJ

AU - Jackson, Rebecca Louise

AU - Smallwood, Jonathan

AU - Jefferies, Elizabeth

PY - 2025/2/20

Y1 - 2025/2/20

N2 - Past work has demonstrated a link between semantic memory and verbal creativity. Yet, few studies have considered this relationship through the lens of the controlled semantic cognition account, which anticipates that multimodal concepts in long-term memory interact with semantic control processes to generate goal and context-appropriate patterns of retrieval. In particular, while the creativity literature has distinguished divergent and convergent aspects of creativity, little is known about their relationship with separable aspects of semantic control, or the semantic intrinsic functional architecture of the brain. We investigated whether tasks with greater reliance on controlled semantic retrieval (assessed through weak association) versus semantic selection (assessed through semantic feature matching) were differentially linked to divergent creativity (assessed with the unusual uses task; UUT) and convergent creativity (assessed with the remote associates task; RAT). Better performance on the RAT was linked to semantic selection, while stronger performance on UUT was linked to more efficient retrieval of weak associations. We also examined individual differences in the intrinsic functional architecture of the semantic system using resting-state fMRI. Greater coupling between the anterior temporal lobe (multimodal semantic store) and left inferior frontal gyrus (in the semantic control network) was linked to stronger convergent creativity. This pathway also correlated with semantic feature matching performance, but not the retrieval of weak associations. In contrast, better divergent creativity was linked to greater coupling between left inferior frontal gyrus and language-related auditory-motor regions, and decoupling from the default mode and frontoparietal networks. These connections correlated with the retrieval of weak associations. Interestingly, while decoupling of LIFG with default mode and frontoparietal networks correlated with the retrieval of weak associations, coupling of LIFG with these networks correlated with semantic feature matching. These behavioural and neurocognitive dissociations show that semantic control and creativity are highly related yet multifaceted constructs that depend on the underlying intrinsic architecture of key sites related to semantic cognition.

AB - Past work has demonstrated a link between semantic memory and verbal creativity. Yet, few studies have considered this relationship through the lens of the controlled semantic cognition account, which anticipates that multimodal concepts in long-term memory interact with semantic control processes to generate goal and context-appropriate patterns of retrieval. In particular, while the creativity literature has distinguished divergent and convergent aspects of creativity, little is known about their relationship with separable aspects of semantic control, or the semantic intrinsic functional architecture of the brain. We investigated whether tasks with greater reliance on controlled semantic retrieval (assessed through weak association) versus semantic selection (assessed through semantic feature matching) were differentially linked to divergent creativity (assessed with the unusual uses task; UUT) and convergent creativity (assessed with the remote associates task; RAT). Better performance on the RAT was linked to semantic selection, while stronger performance on UUT was linked to more efficient retrieval of weak associations. We also examined individual differences in the intrinsic functional architecture of the semantic system using resting-state fMRI. Greater coupling between the anterior temporal lobe (multimodal semantic store) and left inferior frontal gyrus (in the semantic control network) was linked to stronger convergent creativity. This pathway also correlated with semantic feature matching performance, but not the retrieval of weak associations. In contrast, better divergent creativity was linked to greater coupling between left inferior frontal gyrus and language-related auditory-motor regions, and decoupling from the default mode and frontoparietal networks. These connections correlated with the retrieval of weak associations. Interestingly, while decoupling of LIFG with default mode and frontoparietal networks correlated with the retrieval of weak associations, coupling of LIFG with these networks correlated with semantic feature matching. These behavioural and neurocognitive dissociations show that semantic control and creativity are highly related yet multifaceted constructs that depend on the underlying intrinsic architecture of key sites related to semantic cognition.

U2 - 10.1162/imag_a_00502

DO - 10.1162/imag_a_00502

M3 - Article

JO - Imaging Neuroscience

JF - Imaging Neuroscience

SN - 2837-6056

ER -