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Helen
Briggs
BBC
News Online |
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Australian scientists say they have created a "thinking
cap" that will stimulate creative powers. The invention
raises the possibility of being able to unlock one's inner
genius by reawakening dormant parts of the brain.

This shock finding will challenge
many of our conventional views regarding creativity

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Steve Williams,
Institute of Psychiatry |
It is based on the idea that we all have the sorts of
extraordinary abilities usually associated with savants.
According to scientists at the Centre for the Mind in
Sydney, these hidden talents can be stimulated using magnetism.
Professor Allan Snyder and colleague Elaine Mulcahy say
tests on 17 volunteers show their device can improve drawing
skills within 15 minutes.
They intend to submit their work for publication in a
scientific journal.
The news, reported in Chemistry and Industry magazine,
has been given a cautious welcome by experts in the UK.
'Unconscious skills'
Professor Steve Williams, of the Institute of Psychiatry
in London, said Professor Snyder was a highly respected
international scientist and he was looking forward to reading
the scientific paper.
Many
autistics are accomplished artists
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He told BBC News Online: "This shock finding that everyone
might possess unconscious skills that can be 'switched
on' with magnetic stimulation will challenge many of our
conventional views regarding creativity."
The inspiration for the device comes from savant syndrome,
a condition portrayed in the Hollywood film Rain Man.
Savants are extraordinarily gifted. They may have amazing
memories or excel at maths, music or art. But they also
have developmental disorders such as autism.
Mind state
One theory behind savant syndrome is that the right side
of the brain overcompensates for damage to the left hemisphere.
The skills most often seen in savants are those associated
with the right side.
Savant
syndrome |
Rare condition in which persons
with various developmental disorders have astonishing
abilities or talents
Savants also have a prodigious
memory
Typical savant skills include
music, art, and mathematical skills
About 10% of persons with autistic
disorder have some savant skills
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According to Professor Snyder, it might be possible to train
someone to access this state by controlling their brain waves.
David Potter of the National Autistic Society, a UK charity,
said the research was fascinating.
"Some scientists believe that the essence of creativity
is not a state of mind but an activity," he told BBC News
Online.
"Whether Snyder and Mulcahy's research will enable the
expression of savant skills without accompanying impairments
remains to be seen."