Chandana Dixit's Creativity Channel

Why Good Ideas Get Rejected | Todd Lubart

1 h 19 min · 26. Juni 2026
Episode Why Good Ideas Get Rejected | Todd Lubart Cover

Beschreibung

We tend to treat creativity as a single gift, something a person either has or does not. Todd Lubart's research takes that idea apart and rebuilds it. In this episode of the Creativity Dialogues, host Chandana Dixit sits down with Dr. Todd Lubart, Professor of Psychology at the Université Paris Cité and one of the most influential figures in the modern science of creativity. With more than 200 publications, the EPoC creativity battery, and the investment theory he developed alongside Robert Sternberg, Dr. Lubart has spent decades asking what creativity is actually made of and how it can be identified before it shows up as achievement. While much of the field hunts for the moment of insight, Dr. Lubart's work points to the structure underneath it. Creativity, in his account, is the meeting point of cognitive abilities, personality, motivation, and environment, all interacting at once. Drawing on that research, he presents a deceptively simple truth. Creative talent is not one ingredient but a recipe, and once you can see the ingredients, you can measure potential, develop it, and create the conditions for it to grow. In Today's Episode, We Unpack: The Investment Theory of Creativity: Why creative people behave like smart investors who buy low and sell high in the world of ideas, backing unfashionable possibilities until the rest of the field catches up. The Multivariate Approach: Why creativity comes from a combination of factors working together rather than a single trait or spark, and what that means for anyone who has been told they simply are not the creative type. Measuring Creative Potential: How the EPoC battery identifies creative potential in children and adolescents across different domains, and why potential and performance are two different things that schools often confuse. The 7 C's of Creativity: How Dr. Lubart maps the entire field into seven connected themes, and why a shared map matters for a discipline that can feel scattered. Culture, Context, and Environment: How the setting around a person shapes whether creative potential is expressed or quietly suppressed, and what that asks of leaders, teachers, and institutions. Creativity and AI: Where artificial intelligence genuinely supports the creative process, and where the human work of judgement and original framing still cannot be handed off. Whether you are a researcher, an educator building creative potential in others, or a practitioner trying to understand your own development, Dr. Lubart's insights offer a rigorous, evidence-based way to think about what creativity is and where it comes from. Watch the Full Episode Now: 🔗 / @chandanadixitofficial [https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvWUYQohjSjOqfUgaiP9mfA] #ToddLubart [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/toddlubart] #CreativityDialogues [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/creativitydialogues] #ChandanaDixit [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/chandanadixit] #InvestmentTheory [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/investmenttheory] #CreativePotential [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/creativepotential] #EPoC [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/epoc] #MultivariateApproach [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/multivariateapproach] #PsychologyOfCreativity [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/psychologyofcreativity] #CreativityResearch [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/creativityresearch] #Innovation [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/innovation] #CreativeThinking [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/creativethinking] #PodcastRelease [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/podcastrelease]

Kommentare

0

Sei die erste Person, die kommentiert

Melde dich jetzt an und werde Teil der Chandana Dixit's Creativity Channel-Community!

Loslegen

2 Monate für 1 €

Dann 4,99 € / Monat · Jederzeit kündbar.

  • Podcasts nur bei Podimo
  • 20 Stunden Hörbücher / Monat
  • Alle kostenlosen Podcasts

Alle Folgen

39 Folgen

Episode Why Good Ideas Get Rejected | Todd Lubart Cover

Why Good Ideas Get Rejected | Todd Lubart

We tend to treat creativity as a single gift, something a person either has or does not. Todd Lubart's research takes that idea apart and rebuilds it. In this episode of the Creativity Dialogues, host Chandana Dixit sits down with Dr. Todd Lubart, Professor of Psychology at the Université Paris Cité and one of the most influential figures in the modern science of creativity. With more than 200 publications, the EPoC creativity battery, and the investment theory he developed alongside Robert Sternberg, Dr. Lubart has spent decades asking what creativity is actually made of and how it can be identified before it shows up as achievement. While much of the field hunts for the moment of insight, Dr. Lubart's work points to the structure underneath it. Creativity, in his account, is the meeting point of cognitive abilities, personality, motivation, and environment, all interacting at once. Drawing on that research, he presents a deceptively simple truth. Creative talent is not one ingredient but a recipe, and once you can see the ingredients, you can measure potential, develop it, and create the conditions for it to grow. In Today's Episode, We Unpack: The Investment Theory of Creativity: Why creative people behave like smart investors who buy low and sell high in the world of ideas, backing unfashionable possibilities until the rest of the field catches up. The Multivariate Approach: Why creativity comes from a combination of factors working together rather than a single trait or spark, and what that means for anyone who has been told they simply are not the creative type. Measuring Creative Potential: How the EPoC battery identifies creative potential in children and adolescents across different domains, and why potential and performance are two different things that schools often confuse. The 7 C's of Creativity: How Dr. Lubart maps the entire field into seven connected themes, and why a shared map matters for a discipline that can feel scattered. Culture, Context, and Environment: How the setting around a person shapes whether creative potential is expressed or quietly suppressed, and what that asks of leaders, teachers, and institutions. Creativity and AI: Where artificial intelligence genuinely supports the creative process, and where the human work of judgement and original framing still cannot be handed off. Whether you are a researcher, an educator building creative potential in others, or a practitioner trying to understand your own development, Dr. Lubart's insights offer a rigorous, evidence-based way to think about what creativity is and where it comes from. Watch the Full Episode Now: 🔗 / @chandanadixitofficial [https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvWUYQohjSjOqfUgaiP9mfA] #ToddLubart [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/toddlubart] #CreativityDialogues [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/creativitydialogues] #ChandanaDixit [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/chandanadixit] #InvestmentTheory [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/investmenttheory] #CreativePotential [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/creativepotential] #EPoC [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/epoc] #MultivariateApproach [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/multivariateapproach] #PsychologyOfCreativity [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/psychologyofcreativity] #CreativityResearch [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/creativityresearch] #Innovation [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/innovation] #CreativeThinking [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/creativethinking] #PodcastRelease [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/podcastrelease]

26. Juni 20261 h 19 min
Episode Brainstorming Is Overrated. Here's What Actually Works | Roni Reiter-Palmon Cover

Brainstorming Is Overrated. Here's What Actually Works | Roni Reiter-Palmon

Most people think the hardest part of creativity is coming up with a good idea. Roni Reiter-Palmon's research suggests we are looking in the wrong place entirely. In this episode of the Creativity Dialogues, host Chandana Dixit sits down with Dr. Roni Reiter-Palmon, a leading researcher in industrial and organizational psychology and one of the most influential voices in the science of creative problem solving at the University of Nebraska at Omaha, where she directs the Center for Collaboration Science. While most of the field studies how we generate ideas, Dr. Reiter-Palmon's work points to the quieter step that happens first: how we define and construct the problem in the first place. Drawing on decades of empirical research, she presents a deceptively simple truth. The way you frame a problem shapes everything that follows, and the people who frame problems well consistently produce more original and useful work than those who simply brainstorm harder.

19. Juni 20261 h 10 min
Episode The Architecture of Genius: Centurial Creativity with Dr. Dean Simonton Cover

The Architecture of Genius: Centurial Creativity with Dr. Dean Simonton

Most creativity researchers limit their scope to the living, relying on surveys, lab experiments, and interviews. Today's guest built an entirely different methodology—treating centuries of the historical record itself as raw data. In today’s deeply profound episode of the Creativity Dialogues, host Chandana Dixit sits down with Dr. Dean Simonton, Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Psychology at the University of California, Davis. Over a career spanning more than 50 years, Dr. Simonton has analyzed the timelines, biographies, and outputs of thousands of history's most prominent thinkers across multiple civilizations to answer a single monumental question: What actually separates the person who changes a civilization from everyone else? From the distinct "claw of the lion" in Isaac Newton's anonymous mathematical solutions to why Leonardo da Vinci struggled to finish his work, Dr. Simonton shares a lifetime of quantitative insights into the true mechanics of legendary innovation. Today's Episode, We Unpack: The Three Criteria of True Creativity: Moving past the standard baseline of "originality" and "usefulness" to introduce the crucial third element: "surprise" (the psychological shift from assimilation to accommodation). The Theory of BVSR (Blind Variation and Selective Retention): Why mixing evaluation with idea generation truncates the creative brain, and how separating them allows your "default mode network" to fire blindly before your "executive network" edits it into shape. The 10-Year Apprenticeship Rule: Why even child prodigies like Mozart require an entire decade of technical, domain-specific expertise before producing fundamentally original contributions. The "Mad Genius" Statistical Reality: The genetic and environmental data behind *cognitive disinhibition*, explaining why psychopathology and childhood trauma are statistically more prevalent in expressive artists than in rigid, analytical scientists. The Creative Paradox of AI Automation: Why large language models generate technically flawless, "useful" text that ultimately remains bland and uninspiring due to a lack of authentic human agency and non-imitative uniqueness. Golden Ages vs. Dark Ages: The anthropological science behind why creative genius clusters in specific historical periods rather than being randomly distributed through time. Whether you are an aspiring builder trying to find your ultimate lifelong preoccupation or an academic looking to bridge the gap between human agency and product evaluation, Dr. Simonton’s historiometric perspective offers an extraordinary window into the timeless patterns of human innovation. Watch the Full Episode Now: 🔗 [https://www.youtube.com/@chandanadixitofficial](https://www.youtube.com/@chandanadixitofficial) #DeanSimonton #CreativityDialogues #ChandanaDixit #Historiometry #CreativeGenius #BVSR #PsychologyOfCreativity #Mozart #AlbertEinstein #ThomasEdison #HumanAgency #PodcastRelease #DefaultModeNetwork

12. Juni 20261 h 39 min
Episode Blind Variation and Selective Retention: Creativity as a Search | Dean Simonton ✨ Cover

Blind Variation and Selective Retention: Creativity as a Search | Dean Simonton ✨

This reel features Dean Simonton, pioneering psychologist and creativity researcher whose work has transformed our understanding of genius, innovation, and the science of creative achievement. In this clip, he unpacks the profound idea behind Blind Variation and Selective Retention (BVSR). Creativity rarely unfolds through certainty or a predetermined path. Instead, it often resembles trial and error—a process of generating multiple possibilities without knowing in advance which one will succeed. As Donald Campbell proposed, this "blindness" is not randomness or failure; it is the inevitable condition of venturing into genuinely new territory. When the outcome cannot be predicted, exploration becomes essential, and creativity emerges through the selective refinement of what proves meaningful. 💡 A powerful insight: the moment you step into the unknown without guarantees, you enter the true landscape of creativity. From Creativity Dialogues, hosted by Chandana Dixit (Bollywood playback singer) ✨ Don’t miss the full video—watch it now on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@chandanadixitofficial #DeanSimonton #CreativityDialogues #BVSR #BlindVariationSelectiveRetention #DonaldCampbell #CreativityResearch #CreativeProcess #Innovation #CreativeThinking #PsychologyOfCreativity #PodcastClip #CreativityPodcast

9. Juni 202618 min
Episode Beyond the Idea: The Emotional Endurance of True Creativity with Dr. Zorana Ivcevic Pringle Cover

Beyond the Idea: The Emotional Endurance of True Creativity with Dr. Zorana Ivcevic Pringle

Most people believe that the hardest part of creativity is having a good idea—but they couldn’t be more wrong. In today’s powerful episode of the Creativity Dialogues, host Chandana Dixit sits down with Dr. Zorana Ivcevic Pringle, a senior research scientist at Yale University’s Center for Emotional Intelligence and director of the Creativity and Emotions Lab. Turning standard creativity research on its head, Dr. Pringle's work focuses on the exact point where most academics stop: the emotional endurance, resilience, and personal agency it takes to actually bring an idea to life. Drawing from over two decades of empirical data and her groundbreaking book, The Creativity Choice, Dr. Pringle presents a radical truth: Creativity is not a genetic trait you are born with—it is an active decision you have to make and remake every single day. Today's Episode, We Unpack: The Reality of Uncertainty & Risk: Why the innate human fear of the unknown blocks us from executing our thoughts, and how to psychologically reframe risk to take that first step. Emotions as Information: How to treat heavy feelings like frustration and anger not as roadblocks, but as valuable data signals prompting us to pivot our strategic approach. The Dual Nature of Moods: Why high-energy, happy moods are perfect for brainstorming original ideas, while subdued or pessimistic frames of mind are actually superior for judging quality and editing. The "Creative Identity" Formula: Unpacking the three core internal elements—social anxiety, internal self-consciousness, and creative self-efficacy—that determine whether you will share your voice or stay hidden. Weak Ties vs. Strong Ties: The counterintuitive science behind why distant connections spark our rawest ideas, while our closest circles are required to deepen and develop them. Whether you are a writer battling self-doubt, an entrepreneur navigating constant rejection, or an artist feeling stuck in a dark period, Dr. Pringle’s insights provide a highly practical, evidence-based roadmap to crossing the gap from conception to manifestation. Watch the Full Episode Now: 🔗 [https://www.youtube.com/@chandanadixitofficial](https://www.youtube.com/@chandanadixitofficial) #ZoranaIvcevicPringle #CreativityDialogues #ChandanaDixit #EmotionalIntelligence #TheCreativityChoice #CreativeResilience #PsychologyOfCreativity #YaleResearch #CreativeAgency #MindsetShift #OvercomingRejection #PodcastRelease

5. Juni 20261 h 9 min