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Social cues for creativity: The impact of behavioral mimicry on convergent and divergent thinking
Authors:Claire E. Ashton-James  Tanya L. Chartrand
Affiliation:a School of Psychology, University of British Columbia, 2136 West Mall, Vancouver, BC, Canada V6T1Z4
b Duke University, Fuqua School of Business, 1 Towerview Dr. Durham, NC 27701, USA
Abstract:We present behavioral mimicry as a social cue for creative thinking. Specifically, we argue that being mimicked by an interaction partner cues convergent thinking by signalling a social opportunity for collaboration, while not being mimicked cues divergent thinking by signalling a social demand for improvisation and innovation. To test this theory, we experimentally manipulated whether individuals were subtly mimicked or not by an experimenter during a 5 min social interaction, and subsequently measured participants’ capacity for convergent thinking (Experiment 1) and divergent thinking (Experiment 2). The results point to the importance of understanding how social relationships influence the creative processes and contributes to the growing understanding of the social function of behavioral mimicry.
Keywords:Behavioral mimicry   Creativity   Convergent thinking   Divergent thinking
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