Suppressing the reasoning part of the brain stimulates creativity, scientists find
by Nicola Davis from on (#2S4X1)
Using electrical currents to affect parts of the brain involved in planning and reasoning found to make people better at imaginative puzzle-solving
If off-the-wall thinking gives you a headache, scientists might have the solution.
Researchers have found that suppressing activity in part of the brain involved in planning and reasoning can boost an individual's ability to think in creative ways and solve mind-bending problems.
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