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Creative foraging: An experimental paradigm for studying exploration and discovery

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  • Yuval Hart
  • Avraham E Mayo
  • Ruth Mayo
  • Liron Rozenkrantz
  • Avichai Tendler
  • Uri Alon
  • Lior Noy

Abstract

Creative exploration is central to science, art and cognitive development. However, research on creative exploration is limited by a lack of high-resolution automated paradigms. To address this, we present such an automated paradigm, the creative foraging game, in which people search for novel and valuable solutions in a large and well-defined space made of all possible shapes made of ten connected squares. Players discovered shape categories such as digits, letters, and airplanes as well as more abstract categories. They exploited each category, then dropped it to explore once again, and so on. Aligned with a prediction of optimal foraging theory (OFT), during exploration phases, people moved along meandering paths that are about three times longer than the shortest paths between shapes; when exploiting a category of related shapes, they moved along the shortest paths. The moment of discovery of a new category was usually done at a non-prototypical and ambiguous shape, which can serve as an experimental proxy for creative leaps. People showed individual differences in their search patterns, along a continuum between two strategies: a mercurial quick-to-discover/quick-to-drop strategy and a thorough slow-to-discover/slow-to-drop strategy. Contrary to optimal foraging theory, players leave exploitation to explore again far before categories are depleted. This paradigm opens the way for automated high-resolution study of creative exploration.

Suggested Citation

  • Yuval Hart & Avraham E Mayo & Ruth Mayo & Liron Rozenkrantz & Avichai Tendler & Uri Alon & Lior Noy, 2017. "Creative foraging: An experimental paradigm for studying exploration and discovery," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 12(8), pages 1-15, August.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0182133
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0182133
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    Cited by:

    1. Adam M. Large & Benoit Bediou & Sezen Cekic & Yuval Hart & Daphne Bavelier & C. Shawn Green, 2019. "Cognitive and Behavioral Correlates of Achievement in a Complex Multi-Player Video Game," Media and Communication, Cogitatio Press, vol. 7(4), pages 198-212.

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