Cover Image: September 2012 Scientific American Magazine See Inside

Creativity Predicts a Longer Life

The trait of openness improves health through creativity














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Image: BARRY LEWIS Corbis

Researchers have long been studying the connection between health and the five major personality traits: agreeableness, extraversion, neuroticism, openness and conscientiousness. A large body of research links neuroticism with poorer health and conscientiousness with superior health. Now openness, which measures cognitive flexibility and the willingness to entertain novel ideas, has emerged as a lifelong protective factor. The linchpin seems to be the creativity associated with the personality trait—creative thinking reduces stress and keeps the brain healthy.

A study published in the June issue of the Journal of Aging and Health found that higher openness predicted longer life, and other studies this year have linked that trait with lower metabolic risk, higher self-rated health and more appropriate stress response.

The June study sought to determine whether specific aspects of openness better predicted survival rates than overall openness, using data on more than 1,000 older men collected between 1990 and 2008. The researchers found that only creativity—not intelligence or overall openness—decreased mortality risk. One possible reason creativity is protective of health is because it draws on a variety of neural networks within the brain, says study author Nicholas Turiano, now at the University of Rochester Medical Center. “Individuals high in creativity maintain the integrity of their neural networks even into old age,” Turiano says—a notion supported by a January study from Yale University that correlated openness with the robustness of study subjects' white matter, which supports connections between neurons in different parts of the brain.

Because the brain is the command center for all bodily functions, exercising it helps all systems to continue running smoothly. “Keeping the brain healthy may be one of the most important aspects of aging successfully—a fact shown by creative persons living longer in our study,” Turiano says.

He also cites creative people's ability to handle stress—they tend not to get as easily flustered when faced with an emotional or physical hurdle. Stress is known to harm overall health, including cardiovascular, immune and cognitive systems. “Creative people may see stressors more as challenges that they can work to overcome rather than as stressful obstacles they can't overcome,” Turiano says. Although studies thus far have looked at those who are naturally open-minded, the results suggest that practicing creative-thinking techniques could improve anyone's health by lowering stress and exercising the brain.


This article was originally published with the title Open Mind, Longer Life.



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  1. 1. Foren in reply to Stagnaro 05:39 PM 9/9/12

    That last sentence needs some restructuring to be intelligible.

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  2. 2. Stagnaro 01:10 AM 9/10/12

    Dear Foren, you may see website www.sisbq.org, click on JOURNAL OF QUANTUM BIOPHYSICAL SEMEIOTICS and find my article on Brain Sensor activation.
    I appreciate your opinion...and I am ready privately to provide you detailled information.

    Today I am travelling!

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  3. 3. susanmarie8 11:05 AM 9/10/12

    Makes perfect sense to me! I have always said that creativity is more about knowing there is more than one way to skin a cat than it is about art projects. IMHO, being creative is integral to reducing stress levels, therefore increasing quality and length of life.

    When you create more options for yourself, you feel less trapped by circumstances. It is as simple as that!

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  4. 4. turtle2258 09:37 PM 9/12/12

    It's that "'" stuff they like to insert in some words. I used to studder when I was a kid. I was only understood by my creative and openminded brother who just gave a little grin and helped me relax. I made perfect sense to him though. Now that I can type I almost never mess up my words. In any case, You're right susy8. That's why cats have 9 lives. If at first you don't succeed try ANOTHER way. Or, instead of seein the cup only half full, get a smaller cup. When I lower my expectations from others, they always fulFILL my expectations. The same way with myself. meow.

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  5. 5. Raghuvanshi1 11:24 AM 9/13/12

    Creativity always challenged to brain.Brain want most critical problem, put his entire energy to solve that problem.Unfortunately very rarely we find out most challenging problem for to solve.

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