Title of article
The Optimal Age to Start a Revolution
Author/Authors
ARNE DIETRICH and NARAYANAN SRINIVASAN، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
فصلنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
21
From page
54
To page
74
Abstract
Previous research on the relationship between age and creativity
has shown that career age, rather than chronological
age, correlates best with longitudinal changes in creative productivity.
Recently, Dietrich (2004) proposed a new theoretical
framework that integrates cognitive neuroscience with the
findings of creativity research. By identifying distinct neural
mechanisms that might underlie different types of creative
mentation, this framework makes empirically testable predictions
about the relationship between age and creativity. In
this paper, we report the results of such a test and question the
concept that creativity is a function of career age for a special,
but crucial instance. In the case of revolutionary science or
significant innovative discoveries, as opposed to paradigmatic
science, discoveries are almost exclusively made by individuals
who are young, both in terms of career and chronological
age. These results remain robust even when taking into account
the proportion of young scientists in the population of
scientists. Neuroscientific data shows that a decline in prefrontal
cortex function due to aging causes perseveration, the antithesis
of creativity. Consequently, we interpret our findings that
paradigm-busting ideas occur overwhelmingly to people in
their 20’s and early 30’s, as indication that a nimble prefrontal
cortex, and thus chronological age, is a critical factor.
Journal title
JOURNAL OF CREATIVE BEHAVIOR
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
JOURNAL OF CREATIVE BEHAVIOR
Record number
708617
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