Mind-wandering facilitates creative performance in a musical improvisation task

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2026-04-01

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Elsevier
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Inglês

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Mind-wandering is widely assumed to impair ongoing task performance, yet findings from creative cognition research suggest that it can be beneficial under some conditions — an inconsistency rooted in coarse mental state classifications and low-ecological-validity tasks. We tested whether mind-wandering during active creative production facilitates or impairs real-time creative output in the ecologically valid setting of live jazz improvisation. 52 musicians performed a musical improvisation task while random thought-probes sampled ongoing mental states: focused attention, mind-wandering, mind-blanking, and task-related interference. Expert judges rated each performance for creativity and overall improvisational quality. Mental states were phenomenologically distinct across dimensions of intentionality and meta-awareness, and critically, this phenomenological heterogeneity translated into functional heterogeneity in their associations with creative output. Mind-wandering predicted higher creativity than focused attention, task-related interference suppressed creativity, and mind-blanking was neutral to modestly positive. Overall quality was mainly driven by expertise. State × expertise interactions revealed that the creative benefits of mind-wandering were strongest for less- and mid-experienced improvisers. These findings show that during improvisatory creative action, mind-wandering need not derail performance. Instead, it may mark adaptive loosening of cognitive control that supports generative spontaneity and flexibility crucial to creative expression.

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Mind-wandering, Mind-blanking, Task-related interference, Creativity, Musical improvisation

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Palhares, P. T., Branco, D., & Gonçalves, O. F. (2026). Mind-wandering facilitates creative performance in a musical improvisation task. Consciousness and Cognition, 141, 104048, 1-12. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.concog.2026.104048. Repositório Institucional UPT. https://hdl.handle.net/11328/7123

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