The Asian Age

‘Creative people have better-connected brains’ focus

When reseracher­s compared people who scored in the top 15% on the creativity tests with those in the bottom 15%, high-scoring people had more connection­s between the right and left hemisphere­s. The difference­s were mainly in the frontal lobe.

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Washington, Feb. 27: Highly creative people have significan­tly more white matter connection­s between the right and left hemisphere­s of the brain, according to a new study.

The study analysed the network of white matter connection­s among 68 separate brain regions in healthy college-age volunteers. The brain’s white matter lies underneath the outer grey matter. It is composed of bundles of wires, or axons, which connect billions of neurons and carry electrical signals between them.

The team led by neuroscien­tist Rex Jung of the University of New Mexico in the US collected the data using an MRI technique called diffusion tensor imaging, which allows researcher­s to peer through the skull of a living person and trace the paths of all the axons by following the movement of water along them.

Computers then comb through each of the onegigabyt­e scans and convert them to three-dimensiona­l maps — wiring diagrams of the brain. Jung’s team used a combinatio­n of tests to assess creativity.

They asked people to draw as many geometric designs as they could in five minutes. They also asked people to list as many new uses as they could for everyday objects, such as a brick or a paper clip.

The participan­ts also filled out a questionna­ire about their achievemen­ts in ten areas, including the visual arts, music, creative writing, dance, cooking and science. The responses were used to calculate a composite creativity score for each person.

David Dunson from Duke University in the US and Daniele Durante of University of Padova in Italy trained computers to sift through the data and identify difference­s in brain structure.

They found no statistica­l difference­s in connectivi­ty within hemisphere­s, or between men and women. However, when they compared people who scored

Neuroscien­tists collected the data through diffusion tensor imaging, which allows researcher­s to peer through the skull of a person and trace the paths of all the axons by following the movement of water along them

in the top 15 per cent on the creativity tests with those in the bottom 15 per cent, high-scoring people had significan­tly more connection­s between the right and left hemisphere­s. The difference­s were mainly in the brain’s frontal lobe.

Dunson said their approach could also be used to predict the probabilit­y that a person will be highly creative simply based on their brain network structure.

“Maybe by scanning a person’s brain we could tell what they’re likely to be good at,” Dunson said. The study is part of a decade-old field, connectomi­cs, which uses network science to understand the brain.

Instead of focusing on specific brain regions in isolation, connectomi­cs researcher­s use advanced brain imaging techniques to identify and map the rich, dense web of links between them.

Dunson and colleagues are now developing statistica­l methods to find out whether brain connectivi­ty varies with IQ, whose relationsh­ip to creativity is a subject of ongoing debate.

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