The Science of Creativity

John Kounios: The Neuroscience of Creativity

Feb 10, 2026
John Kounios, cognitive neuroscientist and coauthor of The Eureka Factor, studies how aha moments and flow arise in the brain. He discusses the brain’s signature for insight, why showers and sleep spark breakthroughs, the contrast between insight and analytic thinking, links between ADHD and creativity, and what jazz improvisation reveals about effortless flow.
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INSIGHT

What Defines An Aha Moment

  • Insight (the Eureka effect) is a sudden, unexpected solution that pops into awareness and differs from everyday deliberate thinking.
  • Psychological scientists define true insights by abruptness and novelty, not just any deep realization.
ADVICE

Practice With Remote‑Associate Puzzles

  • Use compound remote associate puzzles or anagrams to practice and measure insight versus analytic solving.
  • After each solution, label whether it popped in as an aha or was worked out consciously to train awareness.
ADVICE

Use Mood To Shift Thinking Styles

  • Boost insight by cultivating positive mood and psychological safety, which widen attention and invite remote associations.
  • Recognize analytical thinking benefits from focused anxiety, so choose the mode that fits your goal.
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