Creative behavior, psychopathology, and salience processing: a case–control study of Italian artists from the Florence Academy of Fine Arts
Giuseppe Pierpaolo Merola, Andrea Patti, Bernardo Bozza, Davide Benedetti, Giulia Minotti, Andrea Saverio Spagnuolo, Giulia Pitt, Vincenzo Pecoraro, Andrea Lenti, Gaia D’Anna, Niccolò Porcinai, Silvia Tafuni, Isotta Fascina, Andrea Ballerini, Valdo Ricca

TL;DR
This study explores how traits linked to psychosis, like altered perception of importance, relate to creativity in artists compared to non-artists.
Contribution
The study identifies a novel link between aberrant salience, personality traits, and creative behavior in artists.
Findings
Artists showed higher aberrant salience and openness to experience compared to controls.
Higher religiosity predicted increased aberrant salience in artists.
Artists had lower scores on creativity tests like RAT and ANAG.
Abstract
Creative behavior has been associated with psychopathological traits, particularly in the psychotic spectrum. Aberrant salience, a transdiagnostic feature of psychosis vulnerability, may influence the creative process. This study aimed to investigate differences between artists and non-artists in aberrant salience, creativity, personality traits, and psychopathology. The sample consisted of 123 adults (58 artists, 65 controls) who completed self-report measures, including the Aberrant Salience Inventory (ASI), Big Five Inventory (BFI), Obsessive Beliefs Questionnaire (OBS), Remote Associates Test (RAT), and Anagram Task (ANAG). Statistical analyses included Mann–Whitney U tests for group comparisons, Spearman correlations, and regression analyses. Artists showed significantly higher aberrant salience, openness to experience, and obsessive beliefs, with lower scores on the RAT and ANAG…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCreativity in Education and Neuroscience · Aesthetic Perception and Analysis · Neuroscience, Education and Cognitive Function
