By

Margaret Heffernan /

MoneyWatch/ June 25, 2012, 12:14 PM

Study: Want to be creative? A drink may help!

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(MoneyWatch) Creativity's all the rage. Read enough neuroscience and you too can be Leonardo da Vinci or Steven Spielberg. Books on how to be imaginative and eclectic fly off the shelves, as though just reading about your brain is enough to change it.

But the hard truth about creativity is that even the neuroscientists haven't figured it all out. But what they do know is that it requires different habits. And that old romantic clich? - that alcohol provokes fabulous flights of fancy - seems to have some truth in it.

Which is where the drink comes in. In a piece of research called Lost in the Sauce, researchers from the University of Pittsburgh and UC Santa Barbara describe plying their volunteers with vodka and cranberry juice. What they found was that these volunteers saw more solutions to word puzzles -- and they saw them faster. The less fortunate, sober, volunteers, subjected to a placebo, were more focused but not as creative.

Moreover, those who'd had consumed alcohol monitored their own thinking less. As we all know, this has a downside - you're less inhibited and have less cognitive processing capacity when you drink - but the upside is that your mind, free to wander, may see more connections, associations and possibilities. Freed of discipline constraint, your brain won't notice more but it will notice different things. It too is less inhibited.

F.Scott Fitzgerald and his drinking buddies might have been able to tell you this - but they couldn't have told you why. What neauroscientists now believe is that creative thinking isn't linear. It isn't focused and many great ideas come from the intersection of observations and knowledge that might not, at first, appear to be connected. So although daydreaming is usually something you're told not to do, it's heavily implicated in creative thinking. And drinking alcohol frees your mind up to wander around.

This probably doesn't mean that Mad Men cocktail habits are due to make a comeback. But it does reinforce what many of us have already observed: That our best thinking often comes when we look away from a problem and when we start to relax. Many people have great ideas driving home, in the shower and in their sleep. What's critical is that you allow yourself time to be doing very little. So switch off the TV, the iPod and now your laptop. Go pour yourself a drink and breathe.

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc.. All Rights Reserved.
7 Comments Add a Comment
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AndersN3 says:
No need to drink if we just didn't take the creativity out of the young ones.
http://www.ted.com/talks/ken_robinson_changing_education_paradigms.html
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Al Watts says:
"Everything in moderation" is an appropriate guideline here. Jonah Lehrer also cites the "Lost in the Sauce" study in his great new book "Imagine;" as he says, the downside of drinking is that "you may solve a problem while drunk, but you won't notice the answer." I just included "Imagine" among my recommended readings for "transforming business as usual into business at its best;" readers can access that at http://www.integro-inc.com/Resources/Books_and_Store
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brittanybotti says:
"many great ideas come from the intersection of observations and knowledge that might not, at first, appear to be connected."

This is SO true. I took a "working vacation" recently, where I spent a few days in a coastal town, still working but not holding myself to 8 hours a day and just going where the day took me. I was amazed at the amount of creative ideas and solutions to problems that sprung out from that time. There was a couple drinks enjoyed here and there, but the fine line when it comes to alcohol is the point where it zaps your motivation completely. I usually blog with a glass of wine, and it helps to be more relaxed and free with my writing so it doesn't sound so rigid and corporate.
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sharigreer says:
This is not 'news' as the 'happy hour' affect has long been known to create an environment where people 'let go' and get silly. For creatives and marketing people, these ideas may seem 'great' at the time, after a few cocktails. But does it have 'feet' the next morning?
Forgive me if I find the 'just have a drink' an irresponsible method for creating an excuse to drink to be creative. Yes, it opens minds, but it also kills. Many folks can't have 'just one' and in hopes of being 'creative' may have several, in which case, driving home can creatively kill some innocent victim driving home from their office.
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mrcrashhappy says:
Cheers, Margie!
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STING1ok says:
This is great news!! I stopped drinking years ago because of the problems it caused but now I can drink again because of all the problenms I can now fix being creative solving those other problems!
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Chris2237 says:
I agree 100%, I will schedule after core hour business meeting of my marketing team when a new approach is needed. One drink always opens the minds.
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