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Intuition, insight, and the right hemisphere: Emergence of higher sociocognitive functions

Intuition is the ability to understand immediately without conscious reasoning and is sometimes explained as a ‘gut feeling’ about the rightness or wrongness of a person, place, situation, temporal episode or object. In contrast, insight is the capacity to gain accurate and a deep understanding of a...

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Autor principal: McCrea, Simon M
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3218761/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22110327
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author McCrea, Simon M
author_facet McCrea, Simon M
author_sort McCrea, Simon M
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description Intuition is the ability to understand immediately without conscious reasoning and is sometimes explained as a ‘gut feeling’ about the rightness or wrongness of a person, place, situation, temporal episode or object. In contrast, insight is the capacity to gain accurate and a deep understanding of a problem and it is often associated with movement beyond existing paradigms. Examples include Darwin, Einstein and Freud’s theories of natural selection, relativity, or the unconscious; respectively. Many cultures name these concepts and acknowledge their value, and insight is recognized as particularly characteristic of eminent achievements in the arts, sciences and politics. Considerable data suggests that these two concepts are more related than distinct, and that a more distributed intuitive network may feed into a predominately right hemispheric insight-based functional neuronal architecture. The preparation and incubation stages of insight may rely on the incorporation of domain-specific automatized expertise schema associated with intuition. In this manuscript the neural networks associated with intuition and insight are reviewed. Case studies of anomalous subjects with ability–achievement discrepancies are summarized. This theoretical review proposes the prospect that atypical localization of cognitive modules may enhance intuitive and insightful functions and thereby explain individual achievement beyond that expected by conventionally measured intelligence tests. A model and theory of intuition and insight’s neuroanatomical basis is proposed which could be used as a starting point for future research and better understanding of the nature of these two distinctly human and highly complex poorly understood abilities.
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spelling pubmed-32187612011-11-21 Intuition, insight, and the right hemisphere: Emergence of higher sociocognitive functions McCrea, Simon M Psychol Res Behav Manag Review Intuition is the ability to understand immediately without conscious reasoning and is sometimes explained as a ‘gut feeling’ about the rightness or wrongness of a person, place, situation, temporal episode or object. In contrast, insight is the capacity to gain accurate and a deep understanding of a problem and it is often associated with movement beyond existing paradigms. Examples include Darwin, Einstein and Freud’s theories of natural selection, relativity, or the unconscious; respectively. Many cultures name these concepts and acknowledge their value, and insight is recognized as particularly characteristic of eminent achievements in the arts, sciences and politics. Considerable data suggests that these two concepts are more related than distinct, and that a more distributed intuitive network may feed into a predominately right hemispheric insight-based functional neuronal architecture. The preparation and incubation stages of insight may rely on the incorporation of domain-specific automatized expertise schema associated with intuition. In this manuscript the neural networks associated with intuition and insight are reviewed. Case studies of anomalous subjects with ability–achievement discrepancies are summarized. This theoretical review proposes the prospect that atypical localization of cognitive modules may enhance intuitive and insightful functions and thereby explain individual achievement beyond that expected by conventionally measured intelligence tests. A model and theory of intuition and insight’s neuroanatomical basis is proposed which could be used as a starting point for future research and better understanding of the nature of these two distinctly human and highly complex poorly understood abilities. Dove Medical Press 2010-03-03 /pmc/articles/PMC3218761/ /pubmed/22110327 Text en © 2010 McCrea, publisher and licensee Dove Medical Press Ltd This is an Open Access article which permits unrestricted noncommercial use, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Review
McCrea, Simon M
Intuition, insight, and the right hemisphere: Emergence of higher sociocognitive functions
title Intuition, insight, and the right hemisphere: Emergence of higher sociocognitive functions
title_full Intuition, insight, and the right hemisphere: Emergence of higher sociocognitive functions
title_fullStr Intuition, insight, and the right hemisphere: Emergence of higher sociocognitive functions
title_full_unstemmed Intuition, insight, and the right hemisphere: Emergence of higher sociocognitive functions
title_short Intuition, insight, and the right hemisphere: Emergence of higher sociocognitive functions
title_sort intuition, insight, and the right hemisphere: emergence of higher sociocognitive functions
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3218761/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22110327
work_keys_str_mv AT mccreasimonm intuitioninsightandtherighthemisphereemergenceofhighersociocognitivefunctions