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PsycNET®


  • PsycARTICLES:
  • Citation and Abstract
Scientific creativity as constrained stochastic behavior: The integration of product, person, and process perspectives.
Simonton, Dean Keith
Psychological Bulletin. Vol 129(4), Jul 2003, 475-494.
Psychologists have primarily investigated scientific creativity from 2 contrasting in vitro perspectives: correlational studies of the creative person and experimental studies of the creative process. Here the same phenomenon is scrutinized using a 3rd, in vivo perspective, namely, the actual creative products that emerge from individual scientific careers and communities of creative scientists. This behavioral analysis supports the inference that scientific creativity constitutes a form of constrained stochastic behavior. That is, it can be accurately modeled as a quasi-random combinatorial process. Key findings from both correlational and experimental research traditions corroborate this conclusion. The author closes the article by arguing that all 3 perspectives--regarding the product, person, and process--must be integrated into a unified view of scientific creativity. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2008 APA, all rights reserved)
  • Digital Object Identifier:
  • 10.1037/0033-2909.129.4.475
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