Marily Oppezzo: Want to be more creative? Go for a walk
Marily Oppezzo: Vil du gerne være mere kreativ? Gå en tur
Marily Oppezzo studies how the movement of the body can affect the movement of the mind. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
du kender det -
forbedringer,
you're going to go out for a walk
in your left hand.
Det Sixtinske Kapel.
process did we focus on?
proces focuserede vi på?
coming up with a new idea.
det at komme op med en ny ide.
with a variety of people.
en forskellig række mennesker.
indoors or outdoors.
indenfor eller udenfor.
found the same conclusion.
samme konklusion.
about one of them today.
om et af studierne i dag.
was alternate uses.
var alternative anvendelse.
ways to use common everyday objects
måder at bruge dagligdagsting på
what else would you do with a key,
hvad kan du ellers bruge en nøgle til,
for opening up a lock?
låse en lås op med?
as a third eyeball for a giraffe, right?
girafs tredje øje, ikke sandt?
kind of new. But is it creative?
noget andet. Men er det kreativt?
as many ideas as they could,
de kunne,
that a lot of people go with
som mange benytter
it has to be realistic,
så skal det være realistisk,
a key as an eyeball.
nøgle som et tredje øje.
is that nobody had to have said it.
betyder at ingen har sagt det før.
en passende førstegang,
that we surveyed could have said it.
havde sagt det samme.
a key to scratch somebody's car,
til at ridse en anden persons bil,
you didn't get credit for it.
andre også havde sagt det samme.
and it were a murder mystery,
og det var en gåde hvem morderen var,
of the murderer into the ground
i jorden
because it's appropriate and it's novel.
fordi det er passende og det er nyt.
with ideas while you were seated
ideer imens du sad ned
with different objects.
med forskellige objekter.
først ned
while walking on a treadmill.
imens de gik på løbebåndet.
and this is interesting --
og dette er interessant -
and then they sat.
og senere sad de ned.
that sat together for the first test,
som sad ned under den første test,
about 20 creative ideas per person.
omkring 20 kreative ideer per person.
on the treadmill
on a treadmill in a windowless room.
værelse uden vinduer.
test didn't get any better;
under test nummer to, gjorde ikke bedre;
and then went on the treadmill
efterfølgende gik på løbebåndet
walking on the treadmill
is that you should go for a walk
du burde gå en tur
and just start brainstorming right away.
og begynde at brainstorme med det samme.
the best effect possible.
dette den bedste effekt.
or a topic to brainstorm.
eller et emne som du vil brainstorme.
and all of a sudden,
you're thinking about ahead of time.
brainstorming a different perspective
brainstorme fra et andet perspektiv
is that if I were running,
would be to stop running, so ...
ville være at stoppe med at løbe, så...
is a comfortable pace, good.
er behageligt, godt for dig.
activity is not taking a lot of attention.
ikke må tage for meget opmærksomhed.
pace is a good choice.
er et godt valg.
as many ideas as you can.
mange nye ideer du kan.
is to not lock on that first idea.
ikke at låse sig fast på den første ide.
until you pick one or two to pursue.
indtil du finder en eller to at forfølge.
to write them down,
får den skrevet ned,
and record through your phone
optage på din telefon
a creative conversation, right?
samtale, ikke sandt?
your idea down is already a filter.
gør at du kommer den i et filter.
"Is this good enough to write down?"
"er dette godt nok til at skrive ned?"
record them and think about them later.
optage dem og tænk over dem senere.
and that idea's not coming to you,
og der komme ingen nye ideer til dig,
on a break right now,
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Marily Oppezzo - Behavioral and learning scientistMarily Oppezzo studies how the movement of the body can affect the movement of the mind.
Why you should listen
Inheriting an energetic passion for health from her dad, Marily Oppezzo's past research has investigated ways to use the world to motivate healthy brains and healthy behaviors. She is currently an Instructor of Medicine at the Stanford Prevention Research Center. She is also working with Dr. Dan Schwartz to find out if fidgeting in the classroom may be a desirable cognitive tool rather than an irritating hallmark of inattention, and she's working with Dr. Margaret Neale and Dr. Jodi Prochaska to discover how walking may improve negotiation outcomes.
Along her way, Oppezzo has collected several souvenir lessons from her range of work and educational experiences:
Bartending:
1. The environment has incredible power to elicit and shape behaviors; and
2. Everyone has at least one interesting story in them.
Dietetics:
1. Biochemistry is fascinating;
2. We grant food immense powers. It can be simultaneously viewed as a vehicle of health, morality, social bonding, government conspiracy, inequality and pleasure; and
3. A plateful of knowledge doesn't always help the medicine go down.
Teaching / education:
1. Watching people learn, grow, and change is a deep gratification unique to teaching and behavior change work; and
2. Learning, like behavior change, takes distributed practice to become part of you. (We can’t binge-watch knowledge any more than we should pull flossing all-nighters).
Cardiac rehab:
1. Everyone has the capacity to be an inspiration and in surprising, unexpected ways; and
2. Health becomes incredibly valuable once you experience a true loss of it; and
3. Exercise is the ultimate multitasker: it can heal the brain, the heart and the body all at once.
Marily Oppezzo | Speaker | TED.com