NBER - New Ideas About New Ideas Conference- Creativity in
Science and Engineering March 10-11, 2006
cognitive neuro-science
1. Edward M. Bowden, Mark Jung-Beeman, Jessica Fleck and John Kounios, "New
approaches to demystifying insight", TRENDS in Cognitive Sciences, vol. 9, no.
7, July 2005 [page 5]
2. Mark Jung-Beeman, Edward M. Bowden, Jason Haberman, Jennifer L. Frymiare,
Stella Arambel-Liu, Richard Greenblatt, Paul J. Reber, John Kounios, "Neural
Activity When People Solve Verbal Problems with Insight", PloS Biology, vol. 2,
issue 4, April 2004 [page 12]
3. John Kounios, Jennifer L. Frymiare, Edward M. Bowden, Jessica I. Fleck, Karuna
Subramaniam, Todd B. Parrish, and Mark Jung-Beeman, "The Prepared Mind:
Neural Activity Prior to Problem Presentation Predicts Subsequent Solution by
Sudden Insight" , forthcoming Psychological Science [page 23]
4. Bradley S. Folley and Sohee Park, "Verbal creativity and schizotypal personality in
relation to prefrontal hemispheric laterality: A behavioral and near-infrared
optical imaging study", Schizophrenia Research, 80, 2005 [page 39]
5. Anna Abraham, Sabine Windmann, Irene Daum, Onur Gunturkun, "Conceptual
expansion and creative imagery as a function of psychoticism, Consciousness
and Cognition, 14, 2005 [page 51]
6. David Q. Beversdorf, Dawn M. White, Daquesha C. Chever, John D. Hughes,
and Robert A. Bornstein, "Central ß-andregenic modulation
of cognitive flexibility", NeuroReport, vol. 13, no. 18, December 2002
[page 66]
economics
Introduction by Bruce A. Weinberg [page 69]
1. Adam B. Jaffe, Manuel Trajtenberg, and Rebecca Henderson,
Geographic Localization of Knowledge Spillovers as Evidence by Patent
Citations, Quarterly Journal of Economics, vol. 108, no. 3, August
1993 [page 70]
2. David W. Galenson, A Portrait of the Artist as
a Very Young or Very Old Innovator, NBER Working Paper Series, Working
Paper 10515, May 2004 [page 92]
3. Benjamin F. Jones, The Burden of Knowledge and
the Death of the Renaissance Man: Is Innovation Getting Harder? NBER
Working Paper Series, Working Paper 11360, May 2005 [page 135]
4. Bruce A. Weinberg, Which Labor Economists Invested
in Human Capital? Geography, Vintage, and Participation in Scientific Revolutions,
paper of February 2006 [page 161]
5. Josh Lerner and Jean Tirole, The Dynamics of Technology
Sharing: Open Source and Beyond, NBER Working Paper Series, Working
Paper 10956, December 2004 [page 173]
sociology
Introduction by Lynne G. Zucker [page 317]
1. Melvin L. Kohn and Carmi Schooler, Job Conditions and Personality: A Longitudinal
Assessment of Their Reciprocal Effects, American Journal of Sociology, vol.
87, no. 6, May 1982 [page 318]
2. Paul D. Allison, J. Scott Long, and Tad K. Krauze, Cumulative
Advantage and Inequality in Science, American Sociological Review, vol.
47, issue 5, October 1982 [page 348]
3. Ronald S. Burt, Structural Holes and Good Ideas, pre-publication
manuscript for article that later appeared in the American Journal of Sociology
(2004) [page 359]
4. Elaine Romanelli, The Evolution of New Organizational
Forms, Annual Review of Sociology, vol. 17, 1991 [page 388]
5. Lynne G. Zucker, Michael R. Darby, and Marilynn B. Brewer,
Intellectual Human Capital and the Birth of U.S. Biotechnology Enterprises,
American Economic Review, vol. 88, no. 1, March 1998 [page 413]
6. Lynne G. Zucker, Michael R. Darby, and Maximo Torero,
Labor Mobility from Academe to Commerce, Journal of Labor Economics, vol.
20, no. 3, 2002 [page 430]
history
Introduction by David Kaiser [page 195]
1. Harry Collins, "The TEA set: Tacit knowledge
and scientific networks," Science
Studies, 4, 1974 [page 196]
2. Peter Galison, "Trading zone: Coordinating
action and belief," in The Science Studies Reader, ed. Mario Biagioli
(New York: Routledge, 1999), pp. 137-160.
[page 217]
3. David Kaiser, "Making tools travel: Pedagogy
and the transfer of skills in postwar theoretical physics," in
Pedagogy and the Practice of Science: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives,
ed. David Kaiser (Cambridge: MIT Press, 2005), pp. 41-74. [page 241]
psychology
1. Dean Keith Simonton, “Creativity: Cognitive, Personal,
Developmental, and Social Aspects,” American Psychologist, January
2000 [page 275]
2. Donald T. Campbell, “Blind Variation and Selective
Retention in Creative Thought as in Other Knowledge Processes,” Psychological
Review, vol. 67, no. 6, 1960 [page 283]
3. Teresa M. Amabile, “A model of Creativity and
Innovation in Organizations” in B.M.
Staw and L.L. Cummings, eds., Research in Organizational Behavior, Vol.
10
(Greenwich: JAI Press, 1988) [page 294]