dr. M. (Matthijs) Baas


  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences
    Programme group Work and Organizational Psychology
  • Weesperplein  4
    1018 XA  Amsterdam
  • M.Baas@uva.nl
    T:  0205257093
    T:  0205256860

Biographical Sketch

Matthijs Baas (1980) works as an Assistant Professor at the department of Work and Organizational Psychology of the University of Amsterdam. In 2005, he started his dissertation research about the effects of specific moods on creativity. He received his PhD in 2010 (cum laude) and received the SESP dissertation award. His research is mainly about the cognitive, motivational and affective foundations of creativity. He gives lectures about creativity in organizations and research methods in psychology.

Selected work on creativity

  • A meta-analysis of 25 years of mood-creativity research: Hedonic tone, activation, or regulatory focus? Psychological Bulletin (2008).

  • The dual-pathway to creativity model: Creative ideation as a function of flexibility and persistence. European Review of Social Psychology (2010).
  • When prevention promotes creativity: The role of mood, regulatory focus and regulatory closure. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology (2011)
  • Working Memory benefits creative insight, musical improvisation and original ideation through maintained task-focused attention. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin (2012).

  • Emotions that associate with uncertainty lead to structured ideation. Emotion (2012).

  •  Personality and creativity: The dual pathway to creativity model and a research agenda. Social and Personality Psychology Compass (2013).
  • Oxytonergic circuitry sustains and enables creative cognition in humans. Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience (in press).
  • Whether social schema violations help or hurt creativity depends on need for structure. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin (in press).

Research

The mood-creativity relationship

To better understand the mood-creativity relationship, I classify moods in terms of valence (positive vs. negative), activation (activating vs. de-activating), and motivational orientation (approach vs. avoidance) and argue that creativity can be achieved through flexible and divergent thinking and through systematic and persistent probing of a few ideas. My research with Carsten De Dreu and Bernard Nijstad shows that creativity is enhanced most by moods that are activating (happiness, fear, and anger) rather than deactivating (sadness, relaxed state, relief). Furthermore, my work suggests that activating mood states stimulate creativity primarily through flexibility when the motivational orientation is towards approach (happiness) and through persistence when the motivational orientation is towards avoidance (fear).

The neural correlates of creativity

Because creativity provides fitness functionality in both ancestral and contemporary societies, it stands to reason that (i) the human brain evolved to sustain and promote creative thinking and we should be able to identify (ii) the brain circuitries and neuromodulators of creativity. This project investigates the potential brain correlates and neuromodulators underlying different facets of creative performance. More specifically, using EEG, TMS, and treatment studies, the project sets out to identify (i) the brain potentials associated with, and (ii) the role of the neurotransmitter dopamine in the flexibility and persistence pathway to creative outcomes, and (iii) to identify the neural correlates that explain classic social psychological effects of social cues on creativity. Team members on the project are Nathalie Boot, Simon van Gaal, and Carsten De Dreu.

The impact of threat on creativity

Creativity is important for individual adaptation, successful entrepreneurship, and organizational effectiveness. Especially in a continuously changing world characterized by crises and competition, it is vital to understand how creativity comes about and what factors foster versus inhibit it. In this project, I set out to uncover the way threats influence creativity. This is important because although threats are ubiquitous features of crises and competition, past work has shown they can both increase and decrease creativity, without providing convincing reasons why. To solve this conundrum, I propose that threats may lead to increased creativity, but crucially, mainly when creativity helps achieving valuable outcomes (averting or neutralizing the threat). Team members on the project are Yujie Cheng and Carsten De Dreu.

Other projects

In my other work with Gosia Goclowska, Barbara Nevicka, and Femke ten Velden, I seek answers to questions, such as "what is the impact of mindfulness on creativity," "what are lay people’s beliefs about the cognitive processes, mind states and circumstances that are conducive to creativity," "when and why do schema violations promote or prevent creativity," and "when do highly narcissistic people respond to negative feedback and social rejection with increased performance"?

Selected presentations about creativity

  • Simmering blues and depleting displeasure: How sadness and anger influence creativity. Presentation at SPSP, Tampa, Florida (2009).
  • Specific moods in the mood-creativity link. Presentation at the bi-annual Kurt Lewin Institute (KLI) conference, Zeist, the Netherlands (2010).
  • Moods and motives in creativity: Two pathways and the role of activation. Invited colloquium at Gent University, Belgium (2011)
  • When prevention promotes creativity: The role of activation, regulatory focus, and regulatory closure. Presentation at the EAESP-conference, Stockholm, Sweden (2011).
  • Oxytocin promotes creativity in humans. Presentation at the conference on heurohormonal regulation of human behavior, University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands (2012).
  • Fear is functional and threat makes you creative. Presentation at the SESP-conference, Berkeley, USA (2013).
  • Specific mindfulness skills differentially predict creative performance. Invited colloquium at the Leiden Institute of Brain and Cognition, Leiden University, the Netherlands (2013).

Reviewing (Adhoc)

Cognition, Cognition and Emotion, Emotion, European Journal of Social Psychology, Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, National Science Foundation, Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Making Processes, PlosOne, Psychological Science

2014

2013

2012

2011

2010

2008

2012

2011

  • C.K.W. de Dreu, B.A. Nijstad & M. Baas (2011). Creativity in individuals and groups: Basic principles with practical implications. In D. De Cremer, R. van Dick & J.K. Murnighan (Eds.), Social psychology and organizations (Organization and management series) (pp. 297-324). New York: Routledge.

2015

2010

Media optreden

  • M. Baas (interview) (2014, May 24). Over de kop [televisie-uitzending]. In Over de kop, NTR.

Prijs

  • M. Baas (2013). NWO Veni Grant for "The function of creativity: When creatvity helps to avoid aversive states". Recognition.
  • M. Baas, C.K.W. de Dreu & B.A. Nijstad (2010). A meta-analysis of 25 years of research on mood and creativity: Hedonic tone, activation, or regulatory focus? Best Paper Award, Kurt Lewin Conference 2010: . Recognition.

Prijs

  • M. Baas & E. Bijleveld (2014). Thinking, feeling, and acting in a threatening environment. Two-day symposium conducted at the Kurt Lewin Institute bi-annual conference.: Zeist (2014, May 22 - 2014, May 23).
  • M. Baas & B.A. Nijstad (2013). Current directions in the social psychology of creativity. Symposium delivered at the meeting of the Society of Experimental Social Psychology, Berkeley, USA.

Spreker

  • M. Baas (2014, October 6). Creativiteit: Wetenschappelijke inzichten. Rotterdam, Lezing voor AKD Advocaten en Notarissen.
  • M. Baas (2014, September 30). Mindfulness, psychopathology, and the flexibility pathway to creativity. Radboud University Nijmegen, Nijmegen, the Netherlands, Invited colloquium at the Behavioral Science Institute.
  • M. Baas (2013, December 4). Specific mindfulness skills differentially predict creative performance. unknown, Invited colloquium at the Leiden Institute of Brain and Cognition, Department of Psychology, Leiden University, Leiden, The Netherlands.
  • M. Baas, M. Roskes, S. Koch & C.K.W. de Dreu (2013, November 28). Functional Creativity: When focused creativity helps to avoid threats. Utrecht, Invited colloquium at the Department of Psychology, Utrecht University, the Netherlands.
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