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Want to be more creative? Go for a walk

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    The creative process -- you know this --
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    from the first idea to the final product,
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    is a long process.
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    It's super-iterative, lots of refinement,
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    blood, sweat, tears and years.
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    And we're not saying
    you're going to go out for a walk
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    and come back with the Sistine Chapel
    in your left hand.
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    So what frame of the creative
    process did we focus on?
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    Just this first part.
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    Just brainstorming,
    coming up with a new idea.
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    We actually ran four studies
    with a variety of people.
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    You were either walking
    indoors or outdoors.
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    And all of these studies
    found the same conclusion.
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    I'm only going to tell you
    about one of them today.
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    One of the tests we used for creativity
    was alternate uses.
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    In this test, you have four minutes.
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    Your job is to come up with as many other
    ways to use common everyday objects
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    as you can think of.
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    So, for example,
    what else would you do with a key,
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    other than to use it
    for opening up a lock?
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    Clearly, you could use it
    as a third eyeball for a giraffe, right?
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    Maybe. That's sort of interesting,
    kind of new. But is it creative?
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    So people came up with
    as many ideas as they could,
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    and we had to decide:
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    Is this creative or not?
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    The definition of creativity
    that a lot of people go with
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    is "appropriate novelty."
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    For something to be appropriate,
    it has to be realistic,
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    so unfortunately, you can't use
    a key as an eyeball.
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    Boo!
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    But "novel," the second thing,
    is that nobody had to have said it.
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    So for us, it had to be appropriate first,
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    and then for novelty,
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    nobody else in the entire population
    that we surveyed could have said it.
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    So you might think you could use
    a key to scratch somebody's car,
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    but if somebody else said that,
    you didn't get credit for it.
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    Neither of you did.
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    However, only one person said this:
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    "If you were dying
    and it were a murder mystery,
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    and you had to carve the name
    of the murderer into the ground
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    with your dying words."
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    One person said this.
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    (Laughter)
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    And it's a creative idea,
    because it's appropriate and it's novel.
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    You either did this test and came up
    with ideas while you were seated
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    or while you were walking on a treadmill.
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    (Laughter)
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    They did the test twice,
    with different objects.
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    Three groups: the first group sat first
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    and then sat again for the second test.
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    The second group sat first
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    and then did the second test
    while walking on a treadmill.
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    The third group --
    and this is interesting --
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    they walked on the treadmill first,
    and then they sat.
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    OK, so the two groups
    that sat together for the first test,
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    they looked pretty similar to each other,
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    and they averaged
    about 20 creative ideas per person.
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    The group that was walking
    on the treadmill
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    did almost twice as well.
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    And they were just walking
    on a treadmill in a windowless room.
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    Remember, they took the test twice.
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    The people who sat twice for that second
    test didn't get any better;
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    practice didn't help.
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    But these same people who were sitting
    and then went on the treadmill
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    got a boost from walking.
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    Here's the interesting thing.
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    The people who were
    walking on the treadmill
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    still had a residue effect of the walking,
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    and they were still creative afterwards.
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    So the implication of this
    is that you should go for a walk
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    before your next big meeting
    and just start brainstorming right away.
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    We have five tips for you
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    that will help make this
    the best effect possible.
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    First, you want to pick a problem
    or a topic to brainstorm.
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    So, this is not the shower effect,
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    when you're in the shower
    and all of a sudden,
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    a new idea pops out of the shampoo bottle.
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    This is something
    you're thinking about ahead of time.
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    They're intentionally thinking about
    brainstorming a different perspective
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    on the walk.
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    Secondly -- I get asked this a lot:
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    Is this OK while running?
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    Well, the answer for me
    is that if I were running,
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    the only new idea I would have
    would be to stop running, so ...
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    (Laughter)
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    But if running for you
    is a comfortable pace, good.
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    It turns out, whatever physical
    activity is not taking a lot of attention.
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    So just walking at a comfortable
    pace is a good choice.
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    Also, you want to come up with
    as many ideas as you can.
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    One key of creativity
    is to not lock on that first idea.
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    Keep going.
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    Keep coming up with new ones,
    until you pick one or two to pursue.
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    You might worry that you don't want
    to write them down,
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    because what if you forget them?
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    So the idea here is to speak them.
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    Everybody was speaking their new ideas.
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    So you can put your headphones on
    and record through your phone
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    and then just pretend you're having
    a creative conversation, right?
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    Because the act of writing
    your idea down is already a filter.
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    You're going to be like,
    "Is this good enough to write down?"
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    And then you write it down.
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    So just speak as many as you can,
    record them and think about them later.
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    And finally: don't do this forever. Right?
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    If you're on the walk
    and that idea's not coming to you,
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    come back to it later at another time.
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    I think we're coming up
    on a break right now,
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    so I have an idea:
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    Why don't you grab a leash
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    and take your thoughts for a walk?
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Want to be more creative? Go for a walk
Speaker:
Marily Oppezzo
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
05:25

English subtitles

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