| Keyword search (4,163 papers available) | ![]() |
"experiment" Keyword-tagged Publications:
| Title | Authors | PubMed ID | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | The Bug-Network (BugNet): A Global Experimental Network Testing the Effects of Invertebrate Herbivores and Fungal Pathogens on Plant Communities and Ecosystem Function in Open Ecosystems | Kempel A; Adamidis GC; Anadón JD; Atkinson J; Auge H; Avtzis D; Bachelot B; Bashirzadeh M; Bota JL; Classen A; Constantinou I; Crawley M; de Bellis T; Dostal P; Ebeling A; Eisenhauer N; Eldridge DJ; Encina G; Estrada C; Everingham S; Fanin N; Feng Y; Gaspar M; Gooriah L; Graff P; Montalván EG; Montalván PG; Hartke TR; Huang L; Jochum M; Kaljund K; Karmiris I; Koorem K; Korell L; Laine AL; le Provost G; Lessard JP; Liu M; Liu X; Liu Y; Llancabure J; Loïez S; Loydi A; Marrero H; Gockel S; Montoya A; Münzbergo | 41080499 ENCS |
| 2 | Comparative Analysis of Preferences and Willingness to Pay for COVID-19 Vaccine Among Individuals With and Without Chronic Diseases: A Discrete Choice Experiment Approach | Begum A; Uddin MA; Ahsan SM; Islam MA; | 40687549 CONCORDIA |
| 3 | Rubber Fatigue Revisited: A State-of-the-Art Review Expanding on Prior Works by Tee, Mars and Fatemi | Wang X; Sedaghati R; Rakheja S; Shangguan W; | 40219307 ENCS |
| 4 | Reappraising beliefs about losing control: An experimental investigation | Fridgen CPEA; Radomsky AS; | 39837217 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 5 | Further analyses of appraisals of losing control and other OCD-related cognitions: A quasi-experimental investigation | Sandstrom A; Radomsky AS; | 39626976 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 6 | Infants' Social Evaluation of Helpers and Hinderers: A Large-Scale, Multi-Lab, Coordinated Replication Study | Lucca K; Yuen F; Wang Y; Alessandroni N; Allison O; Alvarez M; Axelsson EL; Baumer J; Baumgartner HA; Bertels J; Bhavsar M; Byers-Heinlein K; Capelier-Mourguy A; Chijiiwa H; Chin CS; Christner N; Cirelli LK; Corbit J; Daum MM; Doan T; Dresel M; Exner A; Fei W; Forbes SH; Franchin L; Frank MC; Geraci A; Giraud M; Gornik ME; Wiesmann CG; Grossmann T; Hadley IM; Havron N; Henderson AME; Matzner EH; Immel BA; Jankiewicz G; Jedryczka W; Kanakogi Y; Kominsky JF; Lew-Williams C; Liberman Z; Liu L; Liu Y; Loeffler MT; Martin A; Mayor J; Meng X; Misiak M; Moreau D; Nencheva ML; Oña LS; Otálora Y; Paulus M; Pepe B; Pickron CB; Powell LJ; Proft M; Quinn AA; Rakoczy H; Reschke PJ; Roth-Hanania R; Rothmaler K; Schlegelmilch K; Schlingloff-Nemecz L; Schmuckler MA; Schuwerk T; Seehagen S; Sen HH; Shainy MR; Silvestri V; Soderstrom M; Sommerville J; Song HJ; Sorokowski P; Stutz SE; Su Y; Taborda-Osorio H; Tan AWM; Tatone D; Taylor-Partridge T; Tsang CKA; Urbanek A; Uzefovsky F; Visser I; Wertz AE; Williams M; Wolsey K; Wong TT; Woodward AM; Wu Y; Zeng Z; Zimmer L; Hamlin JK; | 39600132 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 7 | Effect of nanobubbles on the mobilization of microplastics in shorelines subject to seawater infiltration | Wang Z; Lee K; Feng Q; An C; Chen Z; | 38604304 ENCS |
| 8 | Self-consolidating concrete: Dataset on mixture design and key properties | Amine El Mahdi Safhi | 38533116 ENCS |
| 9 | Loosely controlled experimental EEG datasets for higher-order cognitions in design and creativity tasks | Zangeneh Soroush M; Zhao M; Jia W; Zeng Y; | 38152489 ENCS |
| 10 | Using 13C enriched acetate in isotope labelling incubation experiments: a note of caution | Leone F; Imfeld A; Mirzaei Y; Gélinas Y; | 38097918 CHEMBIOCHEM |
| 11 | Beliefs about losing control and other OCD-related cognitions: An experimental investigation | Sandstrom A; Radomsky AS; | 37948951 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 12 | Always Saying the Wrong Thing: Negative Beliefs About Losing Control Cause Symptoms of Social Anxiety | Kelly-Turner K; Radomsky AS; | 36117751 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 13 | Beliefs about losing control, obsessions, and caution: An experimental investigation. | Gagné JP, Radomsky AS | 32045733 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 14 | Genetic diversity of small populations: Not always "doom and gloom"? | Fraser DJ | 29243868 BIOLOGY |
| Title: | Loosely controlled experimental EEG datasets for higher-order cognitions in design and creativity tasks | ||||
| Authors: | Zangeneh Soroush M, Zhao M, Jia W, Zeng Y | ||||
| Link: | https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38152489/ | ||||
| DOI: | 10.1016/j.dib.2023.109981 | ||||
| Publication: | Data in brief | ||||
| Keywords: | Creativity cognition; Design creativity; Design neurocognition; EEG; Higher order cognitive tasks; Loosely controlled experiments; NASA task load index (NASA-TLX); Torrance test of creative thinking (TTCT); | ||||
| PMID: | 38152489 | Category: | Date Added: | 2023-12-28 | |
| Dept Affiliation: |
ENCS
1 Concordia Institute for Information Systems Engineering, Gina Cody School of Engineering and Computer Science, Concordia University, Montreal, QC H3G 2W1, Canada. |
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Description: |
Understanding neural mechanisms in design and creativity processes remains a challenging endeavor. To address this gap, we present two electroencephalography (EEG) datasets recorded in design and creativity experiments. We have discussed the details, similarities, differences, and corresponding cognitive tasks of the two datasets in the following sections. The design dataset (Dataset A) comprises EEG recordings of 27 participants during loosely controlled design creation experiments. Each experiment included six design problems. In each design problem, participants performed five cognitive tasks, including problem understanding, idea generation, rating idea generation, idea evaluation, and rating idea evaluation. The NASA Task Load Index was used in rating tasks. The creativity dataset (Dataset B) includes EEG signals recorded from 28 participants in creativity experiments which were based on a modified variant of the Torrance Test of Creative Thinking (TTCT-F). Participants were presented with three incomplete sketches and were asked to perform three creativity tasks for each sketch: idea generation, idea evolution, and idea evaluation. In both datasets, we structured the experiments into predefined steps, primarily to ensure participants' comfort and task clarity. This was the only control applied to the experiments. All the tasks were loosely controlled: open-ended (up to 3 min) and self-paced. 64-channel EEG signals were recorded at 500 Hz based on the international 10-10 system by the Brain Vision EEG recording system while the participants were performing their assigned tasks. EEG channels were pre-processed and finally referenced to the Cz channel to remove artifacts. EEGs were pre-processed using popular pipelines widely used in previous studies. Preprocessed EEG signals were finally segmented according to the tasks to facilitate future analyses. The EEG signals are stored in the .mat format. While the present paper mainly addresses pre-processed datasets, it also cites raw EEG recordings in the following sections. We aim to promote research and facilitate the development of experimental protocols and methodologies in design and creativity cognition by sharing these resources. There exist important points regarding the datasets which are worth mentioning. These datasets represent a novel contribution to the field, offering insights into design and creativity neurocognition. To our knowledge, publicly accessible datasets of this nature are scarce, and, to the best of our knowledge, our datasets are the first publicly available ones in design and creativity. Researchers can utilize these datasets directly or draw upon the considerations and technical insights provided to inform their studies. Furthermore, we introduce the concept of loosely controlled cognitive experiments in design and creativity cognition. These experiments strike a balance between flexibility and control, allowing participants to incubate creative ideas over extended response times while maintaining structured experimental sections. Such an approach fosters more natural data recording procedures and holds the potential to enhance the accuracy and reliability of future studies. The loosely controlled approach can be employed in future cognitive studies. This paper also conducts a comparative analysis of the two datasets, offering a holistic view of design and creativity tasks. By exploring various aspects of these cognitive processes, we provide an understanding for future researchers. |



