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Related Experiment Video

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The Innovation Arena: A Method for Comparing Innovative Problem-Solving Across Groups
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Does incubation enhance problem solving? A meta-analytic review.

Ut Na Sio1, Thomas C Ormerod

  • 1Department of Psychology, Lancaster University, UK.

Psychological Bulletin
|February 13, 2009
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Incubation periods can enhance problem-solving, especially for divergent thinking tasks. However, the effectiveness of incubation depends on factors like preparation time and the cognitive demand during the break.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Problem Solving Research

Background:

  • Incubation effects, where problem-solving improves after a break, are inconsistently reported in empirical studies.
  • Previous research has not fully elucidated the conditions under which incubation benefits problem-solving.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To meta-analytically review empirical studies on incubation effects in problem-solving.
  • To examine moderators influencing incubation effect sizes, including problem type and task demands during incubation.

Main Methods:

  • Meta-analysis of empirical studies investigating incubation effects on problem-solving.
  • Analysis of moderating variables: problem type, presence of cues, preparation and incubation period lengths, and cognitive demand during incubation.

Main Results:

  • A positive overall incubation effect was identified, with divergent thinking tasks showing greater benefit than linguistic or visual insight tasks.
  • Longer preparation periods enhanced incubation effects, while high cognitive demand during incubation reduced them.
  • Low cognitive demand tasks during incubation yielded stronger effects than rest for linguistic insight problems.

Conclusions:

  • The findings support the existence of multiple types of incubation effects, suggesting differential activation of knowledge-based and strategic processes.
  • Effective application of incubation as a problem-solving technique requires careful consideration of specific problem types and incubation conditions.