Individual and Group Brainstorming: Does the Question Matter?

被引:7
|
作者
Goldenberg, Olga
Wiley, Jennifer
机构
[1] Columbia Coll Chicago, Chicago, IL USA
[2] Univ Illinois, Chicago, IL 60680 USA
关键词
IDEA GENERATION; FUNCTIONAL FIXEDNESS; CREATIVE-THINKING; PRODUCTIVITY LOSS; COGNITIVE STIMULATION; GROUP-SIZE; METAANALYSIS; KNOWLEDGE; QUALITY; HEADS;
D O I
10.1080/10400419.2019.1619399
中图分类号
G44 [教育心理学];
学科分类号
0402 ; 040202 ;
摘要
The goal of this research was to test whether the kind of question that is used to prompt brainstorming differentially affects individual and group idea generation performance. More specifically, it was examined if prompts that require brainstormers to generate alternate uses for common objects (e.g., other uses for cars) foster more benefits from collaborative ideation than prompts to generate improvements for an object, place, or process (e.g., ways to improve cars). These hypotheses were tested in two experiments using electronic idea exchanges. In Experiment 1, individuals generated ideas about either alternate uses or potential improvements for cars, SUVs, or vans. In Experiment 2, participants brainstormed in response to one of these two prompts in either an interactive group setting (exchanging ideas with two others) or individually (no idea sharing). The results of both experiments showed that alternate uses and improvements prompts indeed differentially affected ideational performance in terms of both idea quantity and quality. The results were also consistent with the well documented "process loss" on the improvements prompt, but the gap between interacting and nominal groups was closed on the alternate uses prompt. Implications for research and practice are discussed.
引用
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页码:261 / 271
页数:11
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