Publication | Closed Access
Multicultural Experience, Idea Receptiveness, and Creativity
414
Citations
52
References
2010
Year
EducationMulticultural ExperiencesCultural StudiesPsychologySocial SciencesMulticultural ExperienceCognitive ConstructionCreativityCreative ThinkingCultural DiversityCross-cultural PsychologyCreative Cognition ResearchMulticultural School PsychologyCreative BenefitsCreative WritingWorld CulturesCultural SensitivityCultureMulticultural CommunicationPerformance StudiesCross-cultural PerspectiveDesign ThinkingCreativity AssessmentCultural AnthropologyCreative ComputingCultural Psychology
Recent advances in creative cognition research prompted the authors to investigate how multicultural experiences influence creativity. The study found that multicultural exposure boosts creative performance, the generation of unconventional ideas, and receptiveness to foreign ideas, but this effect is weakened by a need for cognitive closure and existential terror.
Inspired by recent advances in creative cognition research, the authors examined in the current research some creative benefits of multicultural experiences. Study 1 showed that European American undergraduates had better creative performance immediately after being exposed to American and Chinese cultures or to a hybrid culture formed by fusing American and Chinese cultures; this effect was also observed 5 to 7 days after the initial exposure. Studies 2 and 3 showed that exposure to multicultural experiences is positively related to the likelihood of engaging in some creativity-supporting processes—generation of unconventional ideas (Study 2) and receptiveness to ideas originated from foreign cultures (Study 3). Finally, in Studies 4 and 5, the authors found that need for cognitive closure (or the need for firm answers) and existential terror significantly attenuated the positive link between multicultural experiences and receptiveness to ideas originated from foreign cultures. The authors discussed these findings’ implications on multicultural learning and creativity.
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