How Imagination and Intelligence Work Together in the Brain, with Scott Barry Kaufman | Big Think
It’s useful to distinguish between intelligence and imagination. They are different constructs, as we would say. So I like to view intelligence as all the things, all the thought processes, behaviors that allow us to learn what is. Learn the way the world is.
Whether or not it’s in a classroom situation, we have to use our learning skills to understand the material that’s being taught to us, or we’re reading something we have to comprehend what we’re reading. We have to observe things. A lot of that draws on this executive brain network.
Our ability to focus and to synthesize information in our heads at one time and remember them. So that’s all the things involving our ability to learn what is. Imagination encompasses all the processes that allow us to imagine what could be. So I like to see these as overlapping traits but not completely overlapping.
A lot of creativity requires learning what is so that we can go beyond it. However, if we’re just at the stage of learning what is, if we just have the knowledge, I don’t think knowledge necessarily equals creativity. So creativity requires both intelligence and imagination.
Creativity requires our ability to know what has come before, so we can stand on the shoulders of giants. But it also requires the ability to have great foresight and vision to imagine the world the way that it could be. When we combine the two, I think that makes us much more likely to have creativity.
So many of you might have heard of the left brain/right brain myth about creativity. The idea is that the left brain is not related to creativity much at all because it’s really boring and logical and super serious and analytical. In contrast, the right brain is where all the artistic beauty comes out, and it’s very poetic.
I’ve seen ads like— I think I saw a Ford ad that had left brain/right brain where it kind of makes this distinction and stuff. The reality is that creativity involves interaction of lots of different brain networks that rely on both the left side and the right side of the brain.
And all a brain network is, is when you have lots of different parts of the brain that are communicating with each other to solve a certain task; then it’s called a brain network. You find that creativity draws on multiple interacting brain networks, and it particularly draws on three brain networks that seem to be absolutely essential to creativity across whatever field it is, whether it’s science or art.
One of those brain networks that’s important is what’s called the executive attention network. The executive attention network allows you to integrate lots of information in your head at one time. It holds stuff in your working memory.
This network maintains strategies that you’re currently working on at the time so you don’t forget what your strategy is or forget what you already did and then redo it. The executive attention network is also helpful for inhibiting obvious responses or the first things that come to your mind.
Creativity is important to access remote associations. The executive attention network is going to be helpful in inhibiting the most immediate, obvious things that come to mind. For instance, people who are very good improv artists, the first thing that comes to their mind is usually not the most creative, so they tend to wait for the second or third thing. That’s one of the improv activities.
The second major breakdown that’s important is the default mode network, but I like to call it the imagination network because it’s very active. It’s highly active every time we turn our attention or focus of attention inward, and we focus on our daydreams. We focus on our future goals and when we’re trying to take the perspective of someone else.
It’s very important for having compassion for someone else because it allows us to imagine what someone else is thinking or feeling. So that’s the imagination brain network. The third major brain network that’s important for creativity, which I think is a very underrated brain network, is called the salience brain network.
That’s associated with what is most salient in our environment. What is most interesting to us, even before we think through consciously about a creative activity? Before we activate our imagination, there’s a process before both of that where we have a subconscious process.
The salient brain network tags things as interesting or not interesting in our environment. It feeds it to our imagination network or to our executive attention network to pay attention to. That’s where daydreaming comes from. Daydreaming is associated with the activity in the imagination brain network.
If our salience network tags something as extremely not interesting in our immediate environment, it’ll pass the baton to the imagination network. That’s when we start daydreaming, and we start tuning out to the current environment.
But creativity involves the interaction of all three. It’s when we’re captivated by the moment or mindful, but we’re also imaginative, and we’re also motivated and passionate to engage in the creative activity.