A three-pound pile of electrified biochemistry, better known as a brain, can create beautiful art, discover the laws of nature, invent kitesurfing and think of space rockets. How can it
manage to be so outrageously creative? How Creativity Happens In The Brain is a concise affair with a sharp focus: to stick exclusively to sound, mechanistic explanations and convey what we
can, and cannot, say about how brains give rise to creative ideas. The book examines previous theories which have dominated neuroscience before presenting alternative suggestions as to how
the field can develop. These include variation-selection algorithms, the newly emerging prediction system, the brain’s dual information-processing platform (explicit vs. implicit) as well as
basic concepts from cognitive psychology, such as connectionist networks, task set, task-set inertia, and speed of processing.