• News
    • Bitcoin
    • Altcoins
    • Blockchain
    • DeFi
    • Regulation
    • Scams
  • NFT
  • Metaverse
  • Analysis
  • Learn
  • Videos
  • Blogs
  • Market Cap
  • Shop
What's Hot

📉Cycle Collapse: 1.4M BTC Vanish, Whales Accumulate & History Rhymes 🏦🐳

2026-01-02

Bitcoin Whales Are Loading Up Right NOW

2026-01-02

Ethereum Is Dying… Or Is This the Biggest Buy Signal of the Decade?

2026-01-01

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

Facebook Twitter Instagram
Crypto Investor News Network
  • News
    • Bitcoin
    • Altcoins
    • Blockchain
    • DeFi
    • Regulation
    • Scams
  • NFT

    Bitcoin Just Hit an All-Time High. Nobody Cares

    2025-09-11

    All Eyes on Art: Upcoming Collections to Watch the Week of May 27

    2025-09-11

    Bitcoin Vegas Belongs to the Suits Now

    2025-09-11

    NFC Summit Lisbon Founder on Evolving the Event and Weathering the Market

    2025-09-11

    All Eyes on Art: Upcoming Collections to Watch the Week of June 3

    2025-09-10
  • Metaverse

    Shib: The Metaverse – Part of the Expanding Shiba Inu Ecosystem

    2025-01-03

    Experience to Earn: Everdome’s Metaverse Frontier

    2024-12-30

    Beyond Bots: Meta Motivo and the Dawn of Humanlike Digital Life

    2024-12-13

    Exploring NetVRk: What Is Behind This AI-Driven Virtual Universe?

    2024-10-28

    Council of Europe Highlights Metaverse’s Impact on Privacy and Democracy

    2024-09-05
  • Analysis

    Crypto Exchange Coinbase Lists New DeFi Altcoin Project Built on Base Blockchain

    2023-12-13

    Ethereum Price Bears Keep Pushing, Why Decline Isn’t Over Yet

    2023-12-13

    Trader Bullish on Cosmos (ATOM), Says One Dogecoin Rival Setting Up for Next Leg Up – Here’s His Outlook

    2023-12-13

    AVAX Price Pumps 50% and Dumps 15%, Why Uptrend Is Still Strong

    2023-12-13

    Top Trader Predicts Parabolic Rally for Solana Competitor – Here’s His Upside Target

    2023-12-13
  • Learn

    Changelly Partners With Transak to Streamline Buying Crypto

    2025-12-30

    What is SocialFi and How Is It Changing Social Media?

    2025-12-20

    What Is PayFi? The Simple Guide to Payment Finance and Web3 Banking

    2025-12-19

    What Is TradFi? A Beginner’s Guide to Traditional Finance

    2025-12-18

    Spot Key Trends, Top Sectors, and Early Market Signals

    2025-12-17
  • Videos

    📉Cycle Collapse: 1.4M BTC Vanish, Whales Accumulate & History Rhymes 🏦🐳

    2026-01-02

    Bitcoin Whales Are Loading Up Right NOW

    2026-01-02

    Ethereum Is Dying… Or Is This the Biggest Buy Signal of the Decade?

    2026-01-01

    🔥 I’m Putting My A$$ on the Line: My Bold 2026 Predictions 🎯

    2025-12-31

    Bitcoin Investors…What to Expect in 2026

    2025-12-31
  • Blogs
  • Market Cap
  • Shop
Facebook Twitter Instagram TikTok
Crypto Investor News Network
Home»NFT»AI Ranks Among the Top Percentile in Creative Thought AI Ranks Among the Top Percentile in Creative Thought
NFT

AI Ranks Among the Top Percentile in Creative Thought AI Ranks Among the Top Percentile in Creative Thought

2023-08-29No Comments7 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Of all the forms of human intellect that one might expect artificial intelligence to emulate, few people would likely place creativity at the top of their list. Creativity is wonderfully mysterious – and frustratingly fleeting. It defines us as human beings – and seemingly defies the cold logic that lies behind the silicon curtain of machines.

Yet, the use of AI for creative endeavors is now growing.

New AI tools like DALL-E and Midjourney are increasingly part of creative production, and some have started to win awards for their creative output. The growing impact is both social and economic – as just one example, the potential of AI to generate new, creative content is a defining flashpoint behind the Hollywood writers strike.

And if our recent study into the striking originality of AI is any indication, the emergence of AI-based creativity – along with examples of both its promise and peril – is likely just beginning.

A blend of novelty and utility

When people are at their most creative, they’re responding to a need, goal or problem by generating something new – a product or solution that didn’t previously exist.

In this sense, creativity is an act of combining existing resources – ideas, materials, knowledge – in a novel way that’s useful or gratifying. Quite often, the result of creative thinking is also surprising, leading to something that the creator did not – and perhaps could not – foresee.

It might involve an invention, an unexpected punchline to a joke or a groundbreaking theory in physics. It might be a unique arrangement of notes, tempo, sounds and lyrics that results in a new song.

So, as a researcher of creative thinking, I immediately noticed something interesting about the content generated by the latest versions of AI, including GPT-4.

When prompted with tasks requiring creative thinking, the novelty and usefulness of GPT-4’s output reminded me of the creative types of ideas submitted by students and colleagues I had worked with as a teacher and entrepreneur.

See also  Top Crypto Analyst Issues Bitcoin Alert, Warns BTC Could Nuke if One Critical Support Level Crumbles

The ideas were different and surprising, yet relevant and useful. And, when required, quite imaginative.

Consider the following prompt offered to GPT-4: “Suppose all children became giants for one day out of the week. What would happen?” The ideas generated by GPT-4 touched on culture, economics, psychology, politics, interpersonal communication, transportation, recreation and much more – many surprising and unique in terms of the novel connections generated.

This combination of novelty and utility is difficult to pull off, as most scientists, artists, writers, musicians, poets, chefs, founders, engineers and academics can attest.

Yet AI seemed to be doing it – and doing it well.

Putting AI to the test

With researchers in creativity and entrepreneurship Christian Byrge and Christian Gilde, I decided to put AI’s creative abilities to the test by having it take the Torrance Tests of Creative Thinking, or TTCT.

The TTCT prompts the test-taker to engage in the kinds of creativity required for real-life tasks: asking questions, how to be more resourceful or efficient, guessing cause and effect or improving a product. It might ask a test-taker to suggest ways to improve a children’s toy or imagine the consequences of a hypothetical situation, as the above example demonstrates.

The tests are not designed to measure historical creativity, which is what some researchers use to describe the transformative brilliance of figures like Mozart and Einstein. Rather, it assesses the general creative abilities of individuals, often referred to as psychological or personal creativity.

In addition to running the TTCT through GPT-4 eight times, we also administered the test to 24 of our undergraduate students.

All of the results were evaluated by trained reviewers at Scholastic Testing Service, a private testing company that provides scoring for the TTCT. They didn’t know in advance that some of the tests they’d be scoring had been completed by AI.

See also  Top 5 NFT Collections to Look Out for in 2023

Since Scholastic Testing Service is a private company, it does not share its prompts with the public. This ensured that GPT-4 would not have been able to scrape the internet for past prompts and their responses. In addition, the company has a database of thousands of tests completed by college students and adults, providing a large, additional control group with which to compare AI scores.

Our results?

GPT-4 scored in the top 1% of test-takers for the originality of its ideas. From our research, we believe this marks one of the first examples of AI meeting or exceeding the human ability for original thinking.

In short, we believe that AI models like GPT-4 are capable of producing ideas that people see as unexpected, novel and unique. Other researchers are arriving at similar conclusions in their research of AI and creativity.

Yes, creativity can be evaluated

The emerging creative ability of AI is surprising for a number of reasons.

For one, many outside of the research community continue to believe that creativity cannot be defined, let alone scored. Yet products of human novelty and ingenuity have been prized – and bought and sold – for thousands of years. And creative work has been defined and scored in fields like psychology since at least the 1950s.

The person, product, process, press model of creativity, which researcher Mel Rhodes introduced in 1961, was an attempt to categorize the myriad ways in which creativity had been understood and evaluated until that point. Since then, the understanding of creativity has only grown.

Still others are surprised that the term “creativity” might be applied to nonhuman entities like computers. On this point, we tend to agree with cognitive scientist Margaret Boden, who has argued that the question of whether the term creativity should be applied to AI is a philosophical rather than scientific question.

AI’s founders foresaw its creative abilities

It’s worth noting that we studied only the output of AI in our research. We didn’t study its creative process, which is likely very different from human thinking processes, or the environment in which the ideas were generated. Had we defined creativity as requiring a human person, then we would have had to conclude, by definition, that AI cannot possibly be creative.

See also  OpenSea Makes ‘Deals,’ Launches Peer-to-Peer NFT Swaps

But regardless of the debate over definitions of creativity and the creative process, the products generated by the latest versions of AI are novel and useful. We believe this satisfies the definition of creativity that is now dominant in the fields of psychology and science.

Furthermore, the creative abilities of AI’s current iterations are not entirely unexpected.

In their now famous proposal for the 1956 Dartmouth Summer Research Project on Artificial Intelligence, the founders of AI highlighted their desire to simulate “every aspect of learning or any other feature of intelligence” – including creativity.

In this same proposal, computer scientist Nathaniel Rochester revealed his motivation: “How can I make a machine which will exhibit originality in its solution of problems?”

Apparently, AI’s founders believed that creativity, including the originality of ideas, was among the specific forms of human intelligence that machines could emulate.

To me, the surprising creativity scores of GPT-4 and other AI models highlight a more pressing concern: Within U.S. schools, very few official programs and curricula have been implemented to date that specifically target human creativity and cultivate its development.

In this sense, the creative abilities now realized by AI may provide a “Sputnik moment” for educators and others interested in furthering human creative abilities, including those who see creativity as an essential condition of individual, social, and economic growth.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article by Erik Guzik, Assistant Clinical Professor of Management, University of Montana.

among Creative Percentile Ranks thought Top
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Exclusive Margex Promo Only Available To You! Top Crypto Exchange Gets Even Better!

2025-12-23

Top Bitcoin Security SECRETS (Please Don’t Do THIS)

2025-12-21

Spot Key Trends, Top Sectors, and Early Market Signals

2025-12-17

This Is Worse Than I Thought…

2025-12-11
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts
Videos

This Book Will Change Everything! 🚨 The Bitcoin standard

2025-02-10

davincij15 is a must follow for crypto tips! ___ If you don’t have Bitcoin, this…

Analysis

Ethereum Price Bullish Momentum Fades But ETH Bulls Still In Control

2023-11-08

Ethereum price is still struggling to clear the $1,920 resistance against the US dollar. ETH…

Videos

Bitcoin Ready to EXPLODE Past Resistance

2025-05-20

Today, let’s look at Bitcoin’s charts, metrics and the latest Macro and Crypto news. Bitunix…

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news and Update from CINN about Crypto, Metaverse and NFT.

Editors Picks

📉Cycle Collapse: 1.4M BTC Vanish, Whales Accumulate & History Rhymes 🏦🐳

2026-01-02

Bitcoin Whales Are Loading Up Right NOW

2026-01-02

Ethereum Is Dying… Or Is This the Biggest Buy Signal of the Decade?

2026-01-01

🔥 I’m Putting My A$$ on the Line: My Bold 2026 Predictions 🎯

2025-12-31
Crypto Investor News Network
Facebook Twitter Instagram TikTok
  • Contact
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Disclouser
© 2026 - All rights are reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

bitcoin
Bitcoin (BTC) $ 90,110.00
ethereum
Ethereum (ETH) $ 3,116.58
tether
Tether (USDT) $ 0.999645
xrp
XRP (XRP) $ 2.05
bnb
BNB (BNB) $ 878.42
usd-coin
USDC (USDC) $ 0.999884
staked-ether
Lido Staked Ether (STETH) $ 3,114.09
tron
TRON (TRX) $ 0.288317
dogecoin
Dogecoin (DOGE) $ 0.143229
figure-heloc
Figure Heloc (FIGR_HELOC) $ 1.03