We have incredibly wonderful tools through generative AI that could potentially take creativity and innovation to new levels. Yet, despite all the technology, we’re not seeing significant changes. A group of researchers think they know why.
The key to AI-boosted creativity is the mindfulness of people using the technology, according to Jackson G. Lu of MIT and Shuhua Sun of Tulane University, who led a study just published in Harvard Business Review and Journal of Applied Psychology. Some people are mindful of how they’re using the tools to their best potential; others just churn the work out.
In particular, creativity is influenced by one’s disposition toward metacognition, what they define as “the ability to plan, evaluate, monitor, and refine their thinking.” In other words, those who keep an open mind and maintain critical thinking toward the outputs of their AI tools.
If this rings familiar, it’s because one can look back over any technology development and see how mindfulness can achieve greater creativity and innovation. Movie and television production equipment became widely available many decades back, yet only a smattering of movies and TV shows rise above mediocrity to the level of creative masterpieces.
Mindful individuals identified in the Lu and Sun study “strategically use AI to expand knowledge, free cognitive capacity, and break fixed mindsets, thereby fueling creative ideas,” the team reports. They urge “metacognitive training,” along with designing “workflows that encourage strategic and iterative engagement.”
As similar study published back in the fall finds creative types still stand to benefit much more from AI. It turns out individual differences still matter for creativity when everyone has access to the same advanced technology.
Lu and Sun cite a Gallup survey that shows only 26% of employees who use generative AI report improvements in their creativity. “This gap raises an important question for leaders,” they state. “Can generative AI truly enhance creativity in the workplace, and why do some employees benefit while others do not?”
The team undertook a study of 250 employees at a technology consulting firm in China. Some received a ChatGPT account to use in their daily work, while others worked without AI assistance. The team then evaluated the employees’ creativity outputs, and also conducted a survey to track their levels of mindfulness. “The results were clear. Employees with stronger metacognition became more creative when they used AI—they generated ideas that were judged as more novel and more useful. But for employees with weaker metacognition, AI made little difference.”
When it comes to AI, managers need to “go beyond simply rolling out new tools; they also need to invest in developing employees’ metacognition and promote the thoughtful, strategic use of AI so employees can translate AI outputs into more effective creative performance.”
The research team offers the following advice to increase mindfulness, and thus, extract more creativity from their AI tools:
Employ AI to stimulate creativity. Employ AI in new ways to help people “enlarge their knowledge base, break fixed mindsets, and reduce cognitive overload,” they advise.
Raise awareness about metacognition’s role in the creative process. Don’t assume “that integrating generative AI into workflows will automatically make all employees more creative,” they state. “This means employees must treat AI suggestions as starting points rather than final answers – iterating on them, probing gaps, and challenging assumptions.”
Training can make a difference. “Companies can offer short training sessions that introduce metacognition and walk employees through real examples of AI errors, asking them to anticipate, detect, and correct those mistakes,” the researchers observe. “Longer programs can focus on helping employees build deeper habits of planning, monitoring, and evaluating their thinking. Even simple checklists – clarifying the problem, determining how to evaluate AI’s suggestion, and exploring alternatives – can shift employees from passive reliance on AI to more active, strategic engagement.”
Design workflows that promote active, iterative engagement with AI. “Design workflows that position AI as a thinking partner rather than a shortcut. Instead of encouraging employees to use AI for quick answers, establish processes that involve generating multiple perspectives, comparing and critiquing AI outputs, and refining ideas across several rounds.”
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