The Oxford Handbook of Spontaneous Thought

The Oxford Handbook of Spontaneous Thought

Einband:
Fester Einband
EAN:
9780190464745
Untertitel:
Mind-Wandering, Creativity, and Dreaming
Genre:
Psychologie
Autor:
Kieran C.r. Christoff, Kalina Fox
Herausgeber:
Oxford University Press, USA
Anzahl Seiten:
632
Erscheinungsdatum:
12.06.2018
ISBN:
978-0-19-046474-5

This Handbook is the first of its kind to bring together views from neuroscience, psychology, philosophy, phenomenology, history, education, contemplative traditions, and clinical practice to explore the ubiquitous but poorly understood mental phenomena that we collectively call 'spontaneous thought,' including mind-wandering, daydreaming, insight, creative thinking, and dreaming.

Zusatztext The most comprehensive overview of the wide-ranging field of spontaneous thought to date--and there could be no better guides to this realm than the 64 outstanding scientists, historians, philosophers, and artist who have come together to write them. Informationen zum Autor Kieran C.R. Fox studied neuroscience, philosophy, and world religions during his undergraduate degree at McGill University. He used functional neuroimaging to study the cognitive neuroscience of meditation and spontaneous thought during his Masters and PhD at the University of British Columbia, working with Dr. Kalina Christoff. Currently, he is using intracranial electroencephalography to pursue these lines of research in the Department of Neurology at Stanford University, working with Dr. Josef Parvizi.Kalina Christoff is a Professor of Psychology at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada. Her work focuses on understanding human thought, using a combination of functional neuroimaging (fMRI), behavioral testing, and theoretical work. Klappentext This Handbook is the first of its kind to bring together views from neuroscience, psychology, philosophy, phenomenology, history, education, contemplative traditions, and clinical practice to explore the ubiquitous but poorly understood mental phenomena that we collectively call 'spontaneous thought,' including mind-wandering, daydreaming, insight, creative thinking, and dreaming. Zusammenfassung This Handbook is the first of its kind to bring together views from neuroscience, psychology, philosophy, phenomenology, history, education, contemplative traditions, and clinical practice to explore the ubiquitous but poorly understood mental phenomena that we collectively call 'spontaneous thought,' including mind-wandering, daydreaming, insight, creative thinking, and dreaming.

Autorentext
Kieran C.R. Fox studied neuroscience, philosophy, and world religions during his undergraduate degree at McGill University. He used functional neuroimaging to study the cognitive neuroscience of meditation and spontaneous thought during his Masters and PhD at the University of British Columbia, working with Dr. Kalina Christoff. Currently, he is using intracranial electroencephalography to pursue these lines of research in the Department of Neurology at Stanford University, working with Dr. Josef Parvizi.

Kalina Christoff is a Professor of Psychology at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada. Her work focuses on understanding human thought, using a combination of functional neuroimaging (fMRI), behavioral testing, and theoretical work.



Zusammenfassung
Where do spontaneous thoughts come from? It may be surprising that the seemingly straightforward answers "from the mind" or "from the brain" are in fact an incredibly recent understanding of the origins of spontaneous thought. For nearly all of human history, our thoughts - especially the most sudden, insightful, and important - were almost universally ascribed to divine or other external sources. Only in the past few centuries have we truly taken responsibility for their own mental content, and finally localized thought to the central nervous system - laying the foundations for a protoscience of spontaneous thought. But enormous questions still loom: what, exactly, is spontaneous thought? Why does our brain engage in spontaneous forms of thinking, and when is this most likely to occur? And perhaps the question most interesting and accessible from a scientific perspective: how does the brain generate and evaluate its own spontaneous creations? Spontaneous thought includes our daytime fantasies and mind-wandering; the flashes of insight and inspiration familiar to the artist, scientist, and inventor; the nighttime visions we call dreams; and clinical phenomena such as repetitive depressive rumination. This Handbook brings together views from neuroscience, psychology, philosophy, phenomenology, history, education, contemplative traditions, and clinical practice to begin to address the ubiquitous but poorly understood mental phenomena that we collectively call 'spontaneous thought.' In studying such an abstruse and seemingly impractical subject, we should remember that our capacity for spontaneity, originality, and creativity defines us as a species - and as individuals. Spontaneous forms of thought enable us to transcend not only the here and now of perceptual experience, but also the bonds of our deliberately-controlled and goal-directed cognition; they allow the space for us to be other than who we are, and for our minds to think beyond the limitations of our current viewpoints and beliefs.

Inhalt
About the Editors
Contributors
Part I: Introduction and Overview
1. Introduction: Toward an Interdisciplinary Science of Spontaneous Thought
Kieran C. R. Fox and Kalina Christoff
Part II: Theoretical Perspectives
2. Why the Mind Wanders: How Spontaneous Thought's Default Variability May Support Episodic Efficiency and Semantic Optimization
Caitlin Mills, Arianne Herrera-Bennett, Myrthe Faber, and Kalina Christoff
3. An Exploration/Exploitation Tradeoff Between Mind-Wandering and Goal-Directed Thinking
Chandra S. Sripada
4. When the Absence of Reasoning Breeds Meaning: Metacognitive Appraisals of Spontaneous Thought
Carey K. Morewedge and Daniella M. Kupor
5. The Mind Wanders with Ease: Low Motivational Intensity is an Essential Quality of Mind-Wandering
Dylan Stan and Kalina Christoff
6. How does the brain's spontaneous activity generate our thoughts? The spatiotemporal theory of task-unrelated thought (STTT)
Georg Northoff
7. Investigating the elements of thought: Towards a component process account of spontaneous Cognition
Jonathan Smallwood, Daniel Margulies, Boris C. Bernhardt, and Elizabeth Jeffries
Part III: Philosophical, Evolutionary, and Historical Perspectives
8. The Philosophy of Mind-Wandering
Zachary C. Irving and Evan Thompson
9. Why is mind wandering interesting for philosophers?
Thomas Metzinger
10. Spontaneity in Evolution, Learning, Creativity, and Free Will: Spontaneous Variation in Four Selectionist Phenomena
Dean Keith Simonton
11. How Does the Waking and Sleeping Brain Produce Spontaneous Thought and Imagery, and Why?
John S. Antrobus
12. Spontaneous Thinking in Creative Lives: Building Connections Between Science and History
Alex Soojung-Kim Pang
Part IV: Mind-Wandering and Daydreaming
13. Functional neuroanatomy of spontaneous thought
Jessica R. Andrews-Hanna, Zachary C. Irving, Kieran C. R. Fox, R. Nathan Spreng, and Kalina Christoff
14. Neural Origins of Self-Generated Cognition: Insights from Intracranial Electrical Stimulation and Recordings in Humans
Kieran C. R. Fox
15. Mind-wandering and self-referential thought
Arnaud D'Argembeau
16. Phenomenological Properites of Mind-Wandering and Daydreaming: A Historical Overview and Functional Correlates
David Stawarczyk
17. Spontaneous thought and goal pursuit: From functions such as planning to dysfunctions such as ruminati…


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