Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Harel Y" Authored Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Divergent creativity in humans and large language models Bellemare-Pepin A; Lespinasse F; Thölke P; Harel Y; Mathewson K; Olson JA; Bengio Y; Jerbi K; 41565675
PSYCHOLOGY
2 Class imbalance should not throw you off balance: Choosing the right classifiers and performance metrics for brain decoding with imbalanced data Thölke P; Mantilla-Ramos YJ; Abdelhedi H; Maschke C; Dehgan A; Harel Y; Kemtur A; Mekki Berrada L; Sahraoui M; Young T; Bellemare Pépin A; El Khantour C; Landry M; Pascarella A; Hadid V; Combrisson E; O' Byrne J; Jerbi K; 37385392
IMAGING
3 Processing visual ambiguity in fractal patterns: Pareidolia as a sign of creativity Pepin AB; Harel Y; O' Byrne J; Mageau G; Dietrich A; Jerbi K; 36164655
PSYCHOLOGY

 

Title:Processing visual ambiguity in fractal patterns: Pareidolia as a sign of creativity
Authors:Pepin ABHarel YO'Byrne JMageau GDietrich AJerbi K
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36164655/
DOI:10.1016/j.isci.2022.105103
Publication:iScience
Keywords:Cognitive neurosciencePsychologySocial sciences
PMID:36164655 Category: Date Added:2022-09-27
Dept Affiliation: PSYCHOLOGY
1 Department of Psychology, Université de Montréal, Montréal, H2V 2S9 Québec, Canada.
2 Department of Music, Concordia University, Montréal, H4B1R6 Québec, Canada.
3 Department of Psychology, American University of Beirut, Beirut 1107-2020, Lebanon.
4 MILA (Quebec Artificial Intelligence Institute), Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
5 UNIQUE Center (Quebec Neuro-AI Research Center), Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

Description:

Creativity is a highly valued and beneficial skill that empirical research typically probes using "divergent thinking" (DT) tasks such as problem solving and novel idea generation. Here, in contrast, we examine the perceptual aspect of creativity by asking whether creative individuals are more likely to perceive recognizable forms in ambiguous stimuli -a phenomenon known as pareidolia. To this end, we designed a visual task in which participants were asked to identify as many recognizable forms as possible in cloud-like fractal images. We found that pareidolic perceptions arise more often and more rapidly in highly creative individuals. Furthermore, high-creatives report pareidolia across a broader range of image contrasts and fractal dimensions than do low creatives. These results extend the established body of work on DT by introducing divergent perception as a complementary manifestation of the creative mind, thus clarifying the perception-creation link while opening new paths for studying creative behavior in humans.





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