Frontiers in Psychology (Feb 2019)

The Effect of Zhongyong Thinking on Remote Association Thinking: An EEG Study

  • Zhijin Zhou,
  • Lixia Hu,
  • Cuicui Sun,
  • Mingzhu Li,
  • Fang Guo,
  • Qingbai Zhao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00207
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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The Doctrine of the Mean (zhongyong) introduced by Confucianism is not only an aspect of faith, but also a way of thinking for Chinese individuals. Zhongyong includes two thinking forms: eclectic thinking (ET; i.e., “neither-A-nor-B”) and integrated thinking (IT; i.e., “both-A-and-B”). Given the inclination of Asian individuals toward situational cognition, this study used questions about situations familiar to Chinese undergraduates to activate either ET or IT. This was done to investigate the effects of the two divergent thinking forms of zhongyong on performance levels on the Remote Associates Test (RAT). Both behavioral and EEG results found that participants in the IT condition demonstrated higher RAT scores than those in the ET condition. The conclusion was that the RAT and priming tasks shared the same neural mechanism. This meant that the priming tasks of IT allowed participants to enter a state of creative preparation in advance, further affecting resolution of the RAT.

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