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Does collaboration improve or impede finding remote associations?

Elena Pavliuchik1, Günther Knoblich1

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Collaboration may hinder creative problem-solving. Studies using the Compound Remote Associates Test (cRAT) found that working together in dyads led to slower, less effective solutions compared to working individually.

Keywords:
CollaborationCommunicationConversationCreativityMental fixationProblem-solvingSemantic variability

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Social Psychology
  • Creativity Research

Background:

  • Collaboration is often assumed to enhance problem-solving.
  • However, the specific impact of collaboration on tasks requiring remote associations is less understood.
  • The Compound Remote Associates Test (cRAT) is a key measure for assessing insight and remote association.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate whether collaboration improves or impedes the ability to find remote semantic associations.
  • To differentiate the effects of joint work versus shared information on creative problem-solving.
  • To examine the phenomenon of collaborative fixation in creative tasks.

Main Methods:

  • Two experiments were conducted using the Compound Remote Associates Test (cRAT).
  • Participants worked either jointly in dyads or individually in parallel.
  • Experiment 2 manipulated the level of interaction by removing verbal communication while maintaining shared access to ideas.

Main Results:

  • Joint dyads consistently solved fewer cRAT problems and took longer to find solutions compared to parallel work.
  • In Experiment 1, joint dyads generated fewer ideas and exhibited semantic fixation, suggesting cognitive entrenchment.
  • In Experiment 2, performance costs persisted without verbal interaction, but semantic fixation was not observed, indicating fixation may stem from verbal communication dynamics.

Conclusions:

  • Collaboration can impede, rather than enhance, the ability to generate remote semantic links.
  • The performance costs of collaboration in creative tasks may be linked to specific interaction dynamics, such as verbal fixation.
  • Future research should explore optimal collaborative structures for different types of creative problems.