Pandemonium jolts everyday creativity: Pandemonium jolts everyday creativity

Frederik Hertel, Michelle Wicmandy

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    Abstract

    This article addresses everyday creativity, which will be interpreted as a phenomenon that a certain reference group finds original
    and novel. Quantitative meta-studies of Torrance (1972), Rose, and Lin (1984) as well as Scott, Leritz and Mumford (2004)
    indicate that creativity training has a clear and notable effect on people. Research shows that everyday creativity, or Small-c
    creativity, makes people "feel happy and enlivened" (Silvia et al. 2014). Creativity also improves people's well-being and helps
    them maintain or improve both physical and mental health (Richards, 2007). Zhu, Chen, Tang, Cao, Hou, and Qiu (2016) enable
    us to understand certain brain activities in terms of cognitive processes connected with everyday creativity. However, despite the
    plethora of knowledge available on creativity and the positive effect creativity training has on people only scant research is available
    about everyday creativity produced by common people at work (Amabile, 2017; Zhu, Chen, Tang, Cao, Hou, and Qiu, 2016).
    This article presents a comparative analysis of three cases to find common and essential elements in everyday creativity and to
    determine whether it will benefit managers to provide common people in ordinary jobs creativity training.
    OriginalsprogEngelsk
    TidsskriftJournal of Management Science and Business Intelligence
    Vol/bind3
    Udgave nummer2
    Sider (fra-til)1-8
    Antal sider8
    ISSN2472-9264
    DOI
    StatusUdgivet - dec. 2018

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