The Inspiration Paradox: Your Best Creative Time Is Not When You Think
Morning
people have more insights in the evening. Night owls have their breakthroughs
in the morning
A
bus company in China has launched a new “safe driving” campaign by suspending
bowls of water over their drivers. To avoid getting wet, drivers must drive
gently. In today’s technology-obsessed world, this solution is elegantly
primitive. You might imagine that this simple yet ingenious idea was conjured
by someone functioning at their very best, that such “aha insights” come when
innovators are at their peak. Not
so. A recent study by Mareike Wieth and Rose Zacks suggests that innovation and
creativity are greatest when we are not at our best, at least with respect to
our circadian rhythms. Circadian rhythms determine whether you are a
“morning-type” person or an “evening-type” person, and are often measured with
a short paper-and-pencil test called the Morningness-Eveningness Questionnaire.
Circadian rhythms drive daily fluctuations in many physiological processes like
alertness, heart rate and body temperature. Recent research indicates that
these rhythms affect our intellectual functioning too. Numerous
studies have demonstrated that our best performance on challenging,
attention-demanding tasks - like studying in the midst of distraction - occurs
at our peak time of day. When we operate at our optimal time of day, we filter
out the distractions in our world and get down to business. In
a study I conducted, for example, participants were given three related cue
words (e.g., SHIP OUTER CRAWL), and were required to find their common link
(SPACE). When misleading distractors were presented with the cue words (e.g.,
SHIP-ocean OUTER-inner CRAWL-baby), those tested at non-optimal times were more
likely to be misled by the distractors and showed lower solution rates. Those
tested at peak times were not affected by the distraction. In this and related
studies, peak-time benefits are most robust when distraction would disrupt our
thought processes and cause errors. But
distraction is not all bad, and Wieth and Zacks have demonstrated that we can
use our increased susceptibility to distraction at off-peak times to our
advantage. In their study, they asked participants to solve analytic problems
and insight problems at peak or off-peak times. Analytic problems generally
require people to “grind out a solution” by systematically working through the
problem utilizing a consistent strategy. Here is a classic analytic problem:
“Bob’s father is 3 times as old as Bob. They were both born in October. 4 years
ago, he was 4 times older. How old are Bob and his father?” No innovation or
creativity necessary to solve this problem; one simply has to work it out
mathematically. Insight
problems, on the other hand, often initially mislead the solver. Finding the
right answer requires the solver to abandon the original interpretation and
seek alternatives. Insight problems often involve an “Aha!” moment where the
answer comes all at once, rather than via a systematic, incremental
calculation. Here is a classic insight problem: “A dealer in antique coins got
an offer to buy a beautiful bronze coin. The coin had an emperor’s head on one
side and the date 544 BC stamped on the other. The dealer examined the coin,
but instead of buying it, he called the police. Why?” Insight
problems involve thinking outside the box. This is where susceptibility to
“distraction” can be of benefit. At off-peak times we are less focused, and may
consider a broader range of information. This wider scope gives us access to
more alternatives and diverse interpretations, thus fostering innovation and
insight. Indeed, Wieth and Zacks found
that participants were more successful in solving insight problems when tested
at their non-optimal times. Other
studies show similar results. Consider the task of finding the common link
among three cue words (SHIP OUTER CRAWL). If the distraction presented
alongside those cue words is not misleading (SHIP-ocean OUT-inner CRAWL-baby),
but instead is helpful (e.g., SHIP-rocket OUTER-atmosphere CRAWL-attic),
participants tested at off-peak times benefit from that distraction and solve
more problems. Those tested at peak times do not solve more problems with
helpful distraction, presumably because they filter out all distraction, even
when it might be beneficial. Thus,
being at your best may be over-rated, at least for people seeking innovative
ideas or creative solutions. To be sure, if your task requires strong focus and
careful concentration - like balancing spreadsheets or reading a textbook - you
are better off scheduling that task for your peak time of day. However, if you
need to open your mind to alternative approaches and consider diverse options,
it may be wise to do so when your filter is not so functional. You just may be
able to see what you’ve been missing. In case you are reading this article at your peak time and are struggling with your “aha moment,” coins were never dated BC because no one knew when (or if) Christ was coming. |
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