Marily Oppezzo: Want to be more creative? Go for a walk
Marily Oppezzo: ¿Quieres ser más creativo? Ve a dar un paseo.
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.
you're going to go out for a walk
in your left hand.
del proceso nos centramos?
process did we focus on?
coming up with a new idea.
generar una nueva idea.
with a variety of people.
con una variedad de personas,
indoors or outdoors.
found the same conclusion.
llegaron a la misma conclusión.
about one of them today.
de uno de estos estudios.
fue el test de los usos alternativos.
was alternate uses.
ways to use common everyday objects
la mayor cantidad posible
para objetos cotidianos.
what else would you do with a key,
se puede hacer con una llave,
for opening up a lock?
as a third eyeball for a giraffe, right?
tercer ojo para una jirafa, ¿no?
kind of new. But is it creative?
en cierta medida, pero ¿es creativo?
as many ideas as they could,
tantas ideas como podían
si eran creativas o no.
that a lot of people go with
que mucha gente acepta
it has to be realistic,
tiene que ser realista,
a key as an eyeball.
la llave no sirve como ojo.
significa que nadie lo haya dicho antes.
is that nobody had to have said it.
adecuada, en primer lugar,
that we surveyed could have said it.
a ningún otro sujeto del estudio.
a key to scratch somebody's car,
usar la llave para rayar un auto,
you didn't get credit for it.
and it were a murder mystery,
de un misterioso asesinato,
of the murderer into the ground
del asesino en el suelo
porque es adecuada y es novedosa.
because it's appropriate and it's novel.
podía hacerse sentado
with ideas while you were seated
with different objects.
con distintos objetos.
sentado la primera vez,
sentado la primera vez
while walking on a treadmill.
and this is interesting --
and then they sat.
y luego se sentó.
that sat together for the first test,
sentados juntos la primera vez,
de 20 ideas creativas por persona.
about 20 creative ideas per person.
on the treadmill
on a treadmill in a windowless room.
en un cuarto sin ventanas.
la segunda vez, no mejoraron;
test didn't get any better;
and then went on the treadmill
y luego pasaron a la cinta
walking on the treadmill
durante la segunda vuelta
is that you should go for a walk
and just start brainstorming right away.
ideas ni bien regresen.
the best effect possible.
el mejor efecto posible.
or a topic to brainstorm.
o un tema para pensar.
and all of a sudden,
y de pronto se nos ocurre una idea.
pensando con anterioridad,
you're thinking about ahead of time.
una perspectiva diferente
brainstorming a different perspective
is that if I were running,
si estuviera corriendo,
would be to stop running, so ...
sería dejar de correr, así que...
is a comfortable pace, good.
cómodo para Uds., está bien.
activity is not taking a lot of attention.
que no requiera demasiada atención.
pace is a good choice.
cómodo es una buena idea.
as many ideas as you can.
tantas ideas como sea posible.
es no quedarse con la primera idea.
is to not lock on that first idea.
until you pick one or two to pursue.
o dos para desarrollar.
to write them down,
y grabar en el teléfono
and record through your phone
una conversación creativa.
a creative conversation, right?
ya constituye un filtro.
your idea down is already a filter.
"Is this good enough to write down?"
¿Vale la pena escribirla?
como puedan y piénsenlas después.
record them and think about them later.
un límite de tiempo.
and that idea's not coming to you,
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