4.7 Article

Connectome-Based Predictive Modeling of Creativity Anxiety

Journal

NEUROIMAGE
Volume 225, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2020.117469

Keywords

Creativity anxiety; Functional connectivity; Individual difference; Executive network; Default network; Limbic system

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31771231]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Chongqing [cstc2019jcyj-msxmX0520]
  3. Social Science Planning Project of Chongqing [2018PY80]
  4. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [SWU119007, SWU1909568]
  5. Chang Jiang Scholars Program
  6. National Outstanding Young People Plan, Chongqing Talent Program
  7. National Science Foundation [DRL-1920653, EHR-1661065]

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This study delves into anxiety barriers in creative cognition, uncovering a neural network associated with creativity anxiety and demonstrating its distinction from networks related to divergent creative ability. Additionally, the research developed a Chinese version of the Creativity Anxiety Scale and showed the replicability of key findings across cultures and languages.
While a recent upsurge in the application of neuroimaging methods to creative cognition has yielded encouraging progress toward understanding the neural underpinnings of creativity, the neural basis of barriers to creativity are as yet unexplored. Here, we report the first investigation into the neural correlates of one such recently identified barrier to creativity: anxiety specific to creative thinking, or creativity anxiety (Daker et al., 2019). We employed a machine-learning technique for exploring relations between functional connectivity and behavior (connectome-based predictive modeling; CPM) to investigate the functional connections underlying creativity anxiety. Using whole-brain resting-state functional connectivity data, we identified a network of connections or edges that predicted individual differences in creativity anxiety, largely comprising connections within and between regions of the executive and default networks and the limbic system. We then found that the edges related to creativity anxiety identified in one sample generalize to predict creativity anxiety in an independent sample. We additionally found evidence that the network of edges related to creativity anxiety were largely distinct from those found in previous work to be related to divergent creative ability (Beaty et al., 2018). In addition to being the first work on the neural correlates of creativity anxiety, this research also included the development of a new Chinese-language version of the Creativity Anxiety Scale, and demonstrated that key behavioral findings from the initial work on creativity anxiety are replicable across cultures and languages.

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