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Influences and mental processes involved in generating creative products: Their implications for landscape architects

Posted on:2009-07-26Degree:M.L.AType:Thesis
University:The University of Texas at ArlingtonCandidate:Devilliers, Theunis WillemFull Text:PDF
GTID:2442390005950844Subject:Landscape architecture
Abstract/Summary:
Creativity is the ability to bring something new into existence consciously with 'something new' being a product resulting from a process initiated by a person (Barron, 1988). It may be an idea, an artwork of acknowledged greatness, a scientific discovery, the solution to a problem, leadership abilities, or theories and products that are unique and novel (Barron, 1988).;Influences involved in generating creative products include the social and historical milieu in which creativity is carried out, a culturally defined domain, the creative person's personality, cognitive factors, and motivational characteristics.;The topic of creativity is appropriate for landscape architecture because creative products are generated in this domain. Research on creative processes mostly involves scientific insight. It includes processes of memory, intelligence, reasoning by analogies, problem solving and problem finding. These processes manifest through convergent, divergent, and analogous thinking tasks.;This thesis tests this hypothesis: If participants' scores are high for a divergent task test, a convergent task test, and an analogous thinking test, then they will also achieve higher scores than the mean score of a testing group on a creative design assessment test. This will prove that landscape architects use the processes involved in scientific insight for creative design. Finding correlations between cognitive processes associated with scientific insight and design abilities of landscape architects, recognizes landscape architecture as a field where inventions, discoveries and novel products occur.;Data was collected through a creative abilities test, and was interpreted through statistical analysis. Although the hypothesis could not be proven irrefutably, correlations were found between some cognitive processes and creative design abilities.
Keywords/Search Tags:Creative, Processes, Landscape, Involved, Abilities
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