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John Kounios

John Kounios, PhD

Professor
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences
Office: Stratton 318
jk342@drexel.edu

Additional Sites:




Education:

  • PhD, Psychology, University of Michigan, 1985
  • MS, Psychology, University of Michigan, 1983
  • BA, Psychology, Music, Haverford College, 1978

Research Interests:

  • Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Creativity
  • Problem Solving
  • Individual Differences
  • Brain Aging

Bio:

John Kounios, PhD, has published cognitive neuroscience research on insight, creativity, problem solving, memory, aging, and Alzheimer鈥檚 Disease and coauthored the international Amazon Bestseller, The Eureka Factor: Aha Moments, Creative Insight, and the Brain (Random House). John's research has been funded by the National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation and has been reported by The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Times (London), National Public Radio and was featured in BBC Television and Discovery Science Channel documentaries. His work was profiled by The New Yorker and The Saturday Evening Post and is part of a permanent exhibit at Chicago鈥檚 Museum of Science and Industry. He is a Fellow of the Association for Psychological Science and the Psychonomic Society.

Selected Publications:

Book:

  • (Random House, 2015)

Selected Discoveries:

  • Simply telling someone to be creative can make them more creative, at least for a while. But this can backfire with people who are experts in their field ().
  • Sudden insights (i.e. 鈥淎ha moments鈥) really do involve a sudden shift in brain activity (; ; ).
  • For many types of problems, solutions that occur as sudden insights (i.e., 鈥淎ha moments鈥) are more likely to be correct than solutions that are generated analytically, that is, in a conscious, deliberate manner ().
  • Brain activity before a problem is presented predicts how you will go about solving that problem once it is presented (; ).
  • For many people, an 鈥淎ha moment鈥 is accompanied by a burst of activity in the brain鈥檚 reward system, the same system that responds to basic pleasures like delicious food and addictive drugs ().
  • A sample of a person鈥檚 resting-state brain activity can predict their problem-solving style at least weeks in advance ().
  • Positive mood facilitates insights; negative mood facilitates analytical thinking ().
  • Thinking about the distant future primes analytical thinking while thinking about the near future primes insightful thinking ().
  • When you have an 鈥淎ha moment,鈥 it is often preceded by briefly shutting out visual inputs (; ).