“Creativity should be taught in scientific study programmes” – this is the core message of the authors, which they developed at an “Exploratory Seminar” at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University. In addition to the tools required for research, students should also learn creative processes, which are often the key factor in making truly ground-breaking new discoveries.
Professor Lercher, corresponding author alongside Professor Yanai, emphasises: “It is possible to teach, nurture and encourage creativity. The key teachable aspects include openness to new ideas, the ability to identify novel questions and the generation of many diverse ideas. Analogies and metaphors can help here. It is also important to seek connections between disciplines and above all to learn to accept contradictions.”
Professor Yanai: “Demystifying the scientific creative process can make science more accessible to many young people. And this in turn promotes researchers’ confidence in their self-efficacy and identity as scientists.”
Various universities in the USA, HHU in Germany and the European Molecular Biology Organization (EMBO) have begun to integrate creativity into their curricula. Lercher: “These organisations can serve as models for others. We are confident that science creativity training, which addresses the complexity of modern challenges, will improve the accessibility, effectiveness and quality of science.”
Day Science – Night Science
Professor Itai Yanai and Professor Martin Lercher are focusing on the creative side of scientific progress, drawing on a concept developed by the Nobel Prize winner François Jacob: “Day science” refers to modern science as a systematic, well-planned process guided by hypotheses developed in advance, while “night science” is the non-systematic, creative part of science, namely free thinking and the often intuitive exploration of ideas. And it is this creative process in particular that leads to qualitative scientific advances.
JUNO workshop on Night Science
The Junior Scientist and International Researcher Center of the HHU (JUNO) is offering the event "Night Science – A workshop on the creative side of the scientific process" on 20 September 2024 for doctoral students and postdocs, especially from the natural sciences. Prof Lercher will present different tools for the generation of scientific ideas and practise them with the participants.
Further information and registration
Original publication
Itai Yanai, Oliver Bogler, Sean B. Carroll, Jennifer Couch, Maria Lund Dahlberg, Cynthia N. Fuhrmann, James C. Kaufman, Sonali Majumdar, Jennifer Oyler-Yaniv, Rodney D. Priestley, Tim Stearns, Bodo Stern, Valda Vinson, Keith R. Yamamoto, Martin J. Lercher. Teach creativity in science. Science 385, 837-837 (2024)