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Creativity linked to mental health
May 2010-- New research shows a possible
explanation for the link between mental
health and creativity. By studying receptors
in the brain, researchers at Karolinska
Institutet have managed to show that the
dopamine system in healthy, highly creative
people is similar in some respects to that
seen in people with schizophrenia.
High creative skills have been shown to be
somewhat more common in people who have
mental illness in the family.
Creativity is also linked to a slightly
higher risk of schizophrenia and bipolar
disorder.
Certain psychological traits, such as the
ability to make unusual pr bizarre
associations are also shared by
schizophrenics and healthy, highly creative
people. And now the correlation between
creativity and mental health has scientific
backing.
"We have studied the brain and the dopamine
D2 receptors, and have shown that the
dopamine system of healthy, highly creative
people is similar to that found in people
with schizophrenia," says associate
professor Fredrik Ullén from Karolinska
Institutet's Department of Woman and Child
Health.
Just which brain mechanisms are responsible
for this correlation is still something of a
mystery, but Dr Ullén conjectures that the
function of systems in the brain that use
dopamine is significant; for example,
studies have shown that dopamine receptor
genes are linked to ability for divergent
thought. Dr Ullén's study measured the
creativity of healthy individuals using
divergent psychological tests, in which the
task was to find many different solutions to
a problem.
"The study shows that highly creative people
who did well on the divergent tests had a
lower density of D2 receptors in the
thalamus than less creative people," says Dr
Ullén.
"Schizophrenics are also known to have low
D2 density in this part of the brain,
suggesting a cause of the link between
mental illness and creativity."
The thalamus serves as a kind of relay
centre, filtering information before it
reaches areas of the cortex, which is
responsible, amongst other things, for
cognition and reasoning.
"Fewer D2 receptors in the thalamus probably
means a lower degree of signal filtering,
and thus a higher flow of information from
the thalamus," says Dr Ullén, and explains
that this could a possible mechanism behind
the ability of healthy highly creative
people to see numerous uncommon connections
in a problem-solving situation and the
bizarre associations found in the mentally
ill.
"Thinking outside the box might be
facilitated by having a somewhat less intact
box," says Dr Ullén about his new findings.
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