Functional lateralization of the medial temporal lobe in novel associative processing during creativity evaluation

Author:

Ren Jingyuan12ORCID,Huang Furong3ORCID,Gao Chuanji2ORCID,Gott Jarrod2ORCID,Schoch Sarah F24ORCID,Qin Shaozheng56ORCID,Dresler Martin2ORCID,Luo Jing178ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Beijing Key Laboratory of Learning and Cognition, School of Psychology, Capital Normal University , Beijing 100048, China

2. Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Radboud University Medical Center , Nijmegen, 6525 EN, Netherlands

3. School of Psychology, Jiangxi Normal University , Nanchang 330022, China

4. Center of Competence Sleep & Health Zurich, University of Zurich , Zürich 8091, Switzerland

5. State Key Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience and Learning & IDG/McGovern Institute for Brain Research, Faculty of Psychology at Beijing Normal University , Beijing 100875, China

6. Chinese Institute for Brain Research , Beijing 102206, China

7. Key Laboratory of Mental Health, Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences , Beijing 100101, China

8. Department of Psychology , Shaoxing University, Shaoxing 312000, China

Abstract

Abstract Although hemispheric lateralization of creativity has been a longstanding topic of debate, the underlying neurocognitive mechanism remains poorly understood. Here we designed 2 types of novel stimuli—“novel useful and novel useless,” adapted from “familiar useful” designs taken from daily life—to demonstrate how the left and right medial temporal lobe (MTL) respond to novel designs of different usefulness. Taking the “familiar useful” design as a baseline, we found that the right MTL showed increased activation in response to “novel useful” designs, followed by “novel useless” ones, while the left MTL only showed increased activation in response to “novel useful” designs. Calculating an asymmetry index suggests that usefulness processing is predominant in the left MTL, whereas the right MTL is predominantly involved in novelty processing. Moreover, the left parahippocampal gyrus (PHG) showed stronger functional connectivity with the anterior cingulate cortex when responding to “novel useless” designs. In contrast, the right PHG showed stronger connectivity with the amygdala, midbrain, and hippocampus. Critically, multivoxel representational similarity analyses revealed that the left MTL was more effective than the right MTL at distinguishing the usefulness differences in novel stimuli, while representational patterns in the left PHG positively predicted the post-behavior evaluation of “truly creative” products. These findings suggest an apparent dissociation of the left and right MTL in integrating the novelty and usefulness information and novel associative processing during creativity evaluation, respectively. Our results provide novel insights into a longstanding and controversial question in creativity research by demonstrating functional lateralization of the MTL in processing novel associations.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Capacity Building for Sci-Tech Innovation-Fundamental Scientific Research Funds

Boehringer Ingelheim Fonds for Basic Research in Medicine of Germany

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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