Tech

Video conferencing hinders creativity, study finds

A study of 1,500 people from around the world showed that employees who spoke in person would generate more creative ideas

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 28 Apr 2022 11:00AM

Video conferencing hinders creativity, study finds
The effects of the pandemic on office culture are still reverberating as companies transition to hybrid home-office set-ups. – ETX pic, April 28, 2022

PEOPLE are worse at coming up with creative ideas during a video call compared to meeting in person, a study said Wednesday, suggesting that workplaces should prioritise brainstorming sessions for the office.

The pandemic has changed the nature of office work, propelling a massive rise in video conferencing that looks unlikely to abate as homeworking becomes more entrenched across the world.

Seeking to find out how this huge change affects creativity, US researchers studied nearly 1,500 employees of a telecommunications company in Finland, Hungary, India, Israel and Portugal.

In pairs, either in person or on a Zoom call, the employees came up with as many creative ideas as they could for the company's products, then picked the best one.

The pairs who spoke in person came up with around 15% more, according to the study published in the Nature journal.

The researchers found similar results in an experiment involving more than 600 university students, who were also paired off and told to come up with creative ideas for either a frisbee or bubble wrap.

The in-person pairs came up with 14% more ideas.

However, it was not all bad news for Zoom, Skype and the other video conferencing apps.

Both sets of results found that video calls were just as effective for selecting the best idea, a decision which requires "cognitive focus and analytical reasoning", the study said.

'We're most creative when unfocused'

To understand the difference, the researchers tracked the gaze of the participants.

"In the virtual condition people are looking significantly more at their partner – almost double – at the expense of their broader environment," the study's co-author Melanie Brucks, an assistant marketing professor at Columbia University, said in a Nature video.

The study said that "video conferencing hampers idea generation because it focuses communicators on a screen, which prompts a narrower cognitive focus".

That kind of focus might help select the best idea – but hinder coming up with one in the first place.

"We're most creative when we're unfocused and free," Brucks said.

"I always suggest turning off the camera during idea generation, so you can walk around, you can look around."

These results could inform how companies plan remote working, said the study – particularly in hybrid home-office set-ups where "it might make sense to prioritise creative idea generation during in-person meetings".

The researchers added that they had had to exclude results from a telecommunications company's engineers in Poland who, unlike the other groups, met in a hotel conference room.

"Perhaps for this reason, participants exhibited rampant non-compliance, including a notable preoccupation with the hotel catering's coffee and cookie station," the study said. – AFP, April 28, 2022

Related News

Malaysia / 1w

Southeast Asia’s booming scam industry eyes Malaysia

Diary / 5mth

Penangites urge KTM to set up ticketing counter on island

Business / 1y

German tech company confident US tariffs will not impact its exports

Malaysia / 1y

PM brings grandkids to office to ‘see how he works’

Business / 1y

HP reaffirms commitment to invest in Penang

World / 1y

Dissanayake takes oath of office, promising to "rewrite history" 

Spotlight

Malaysia

Bersatu-PH tie-up a possibility as coalition seeks Malay support, analyst says

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Malaysia

Woman molested on her way home from work (video)

Malaysia

Court allows Daim's daughter to permanently keep passport

Malaysia

Santiago pokes holes in data centre hype, asks: Who really benefits?

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Malaysia

Jeweller vows to pursue Rosmah until ‘every penny’ is recovered as RM67.5m battle enters enforcement phase

Malaysia

Ambulance carrying two injured men crashes en route to hospital after MPV collision in Besut

Malaysia

Man blames 'lack of love' for sexual assault on teens

Business

BNM's OPR to stay at 2.75 pcent in 2026 amid strong domestic demand - Kenanga IB

Malaysia

Missing jewellery: Rosmah ordered to pay RM67.5 million

You may be interested

Off beat

KLSICCI presidential candidate says it's time to restore glory, empower the future

People

Malay kampongs in Bangkok: Echoes of southern heritage in Thailand’s capital