Prepulse Inhibition and P50 Suppression in Relation to Creativity and Attention: Dispersed Attention Beneficial to Quantitative but Not Qualitative Measures of Divergent Thinking

Marije Stolte, Bob Oranje, Hans van Luit, Evelyn Kroesbergen

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

The current study investigated whether lower sensory and sensorimotor gating were related to higher levels of creativity and/or attentional difficulties in a natural population of primary school children (9- to 13-year-old). Gating abilities were measured with P50 suppression and prepulse inhibition of the startle reflex (PPI). The final sample included 65 participants in the P50 analyses and 37 participants in the PPI analyses. Our results showed that children with a high P50 amplitude to testing stimuli scored significantly higher on the divergent outcome measures of fluency and flexibility but not originality compared to children with a lower amplitude. No significant differences were found on any of the creativity measures when the sample was split on average PPI parameters. No significant differences in attention, as measured with a parent questionnaire, were found between children with low or high levels of sensory or sensorimotor gating. The data suggest that quantitative, but not qualitative measures of divergent thinking benefit from lower psychophysiological gating and that attentional difficulties stem from specific instead of general gating deficits. Future studies should take the effect of controlled attention into consideration.
Original languageEnglish
Article number875398
JournalFrontiers in Psychiatry
Volume13
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 9 Jun 2022

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
The authors would like to thank all the children that participated and the research interns Ruben van Boxel and Veerle Prenger for their assistance with the psychophysiological data collection.

Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2022 Stolte, Oranje, Van Luit and Kroesbergen.

Keywords

  • ADHD
  • children
  • creativity
  • divergent thinking
  • psychophysiological gating
  • sensorimotor gating
  • sensory gating

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