DocumentCode
2497679
Title
Drive for Creativity
Author
Perlovsky, Leonid I. ; Levine, Daniel S.
Author_Institution
AFRL, Harvard Univ., Hanscom AFB, MA, USA
fYear
2010
fDate
18-23 July 2010
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
6
Abstract
We advance a hypothesis that creativity has evolved with evolution of internal representations, possibly from amniotes to primates, and further in human cultural evolution. Representations separated sensing from acting and gave “internal room” for creativity. To see (or perform any sensing), creatures with internal representations had to modify these representations to fit sensor signals. Therefore the knowledge instinct, KI, the drive to fit representations to the world, had to evolve along with internal representations. Until primates, it remained simple, without language internal representations could not evolve from perceptions to abstract representations, and abstract thoughts were not possible. We consider creative vs. non-creative decision making, and compare KI with Kahneman-Tversky´s heuristic thinking. We identify higher, conscious levels of KI with the drive for creativity (DC) and discuss the roles of language and music, brain mechanisms involved, and experimental directions for testing the advanced hypotheses.
Keywords
brain; cognition; evolution (biological); Kahneman-Tversky heuristic thinking; decision making; drive for creativity; knowledge instinct; Cognition; Variable speed drives; Wireless sensor networks;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Neural Networks (IJCNN), The 2010 International Joint Conference on
Conference_Location
Barcelona
ISSN
1098-7576
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-6916-1
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IJCNN.2010.5596920
Filename
5596920
Link To Document