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Tim Brown on creativity and play


Poziom:

Temat: Społeczeństwo i nauki społeczne

So this guy, this guy is a guy named Bob McKim.
And he was a creativity researcher in the '60s and '70s,
and also led the Stanford design program.
And in fact, my friend and IDEO founder, David Kelley,
who’s out there somewhere, studied under him at Stanford.
And he liked to do an exercise with his students
where he got them to take a piece of paper
and draw the person sat next to them, their neighbor,
very quickly, just as quickly as they could.
And in fact, we’re going to do that exercise right now.
You all have a piece of cardboard and a piece of paper.
It’s actually got a bunch of circles on it.
I need you to turn that piece of paper over,
you should find it’s blank on the other side, OK?
And there should be a pencil.
And I want you to pick somebody that’s sat next to you,
and when I say, go, you’ve got 30 seconds to draw your neighbor, OK?
So, everybody ready? OK. Off you go.
You’ve got 30 seconds, you’d better be fast.
Come on, those masterpieces.
OK? Stop. All right, now.
(Laughter)
Yes, lot’s of laughter. Yeah, exactly.
Lots of laughter, quite a bit of embarrassment.
(Laughter)
Am I hearing a few, sorry’s? I think I’m hearing a few sorry’s.
Yup, yup, I think I probably am.
And that’s exactly what happens every time,
every time you do this with adults.
And McKim found this every time he did it with his students.
He got exactly the same response: lots and lots of sorry’s.
(Laughter)
And he would point this out as evidence
that we fear the judgment of our peers,
and that we’re embarrassed about, kind of, showing our ideas
to people we think of as our peers, to those around us.
And it’s this fear is what causes us
to be conservative in our thinking.
So we might have a wild idea,
but we’re afraid to share it with anybody else.
OK, so if you try the same exercise with kids,
they have no embarrassment at all.
They just quite happily show their masterpiece
to whoever wants to look at it.
But as they learn to become adults,
they become much more sensitive to the opinions of others,
and they lose that freedom and they do start to become embarrassed.
And in studies of kids playing, it’s been shown
time after time, that kids who feel secure,
who are in a kind of trusted environment,
they’re the ones that feel most free to play.
And if you’re starting a design firm, let’s say,
then you probably also want to create, you know,
a place where people have the same kind of security.
Where they have the same kind of security to take risks.
Maybe have the same kind of security to play.
Before founding IDEO, David said that what he wanted to do
was to form a company where all the employees are my best friends.
Now, that wasn’t just self-indulgence.
He knew that friendship is a short cut to play.
And he knew that it gives us a sense of trust,
and it allows us then to take the kind of creative risks
that we need to take as a designer.
And so that kind of decision to work with his friends --
now he has 550 of them -- was what got IDEO started.
And our studios, like, I think, many creative workplaces today,
are designed to help people feel relaxed.
Familiar with their surroundings,
comfortable with the people that they’re working with.
It takes more than decor, but I think we’ve all seen that, you know,
creative companies do often have symbols in the workplace
that remind people to be playful,
and that it’s a permissive environment.
So whether it’s this microbus meeting room
that we have in one our buildings at IDEO,
or at Pixar where the animators work in wooden huts and decorated caves.
Or at the Googleplex where, you know,
it’s famous for its volley beach ball courts,
and even this massive dinosaur skeleton with pink flamingos on it.
Don’t know the reason for the pink flamingos,
but anyway, they’re there in the garden.
Or even in the Swiss office of Google,
which perhaps has the most wacky ideas of all.
And my theory is that’s so the Swiss can prove
to their Californian colleagues that they’re not boring.
So they have the slide, and they even have a fireman’s pole.
Don’t know what they do with that, but they have one.
So all of these places, you know, have these symbols.
Now, our big symbol at IDEO is actually
not so much the place, it’s a thing.
And it’s actually something that we invented a few years ago,
or created a few years ago.
So it’s a toy. And it’s called a "finger blaster."
And I forgot to bring one up with me.
So if somebody can reach under that chair that’s next to them,
you’ll find something taped underneath it.
That’s great. If you could pass it up. Thanks, David, I appreciate it.
So this is a finger blaster, and you will find that every one of you
has got one taped under your chair.
And I’m going to run a little experiment. Another little experiment.
But before we start, I need just to put these on.
Thank you. All right.
Now, what I’m going to do is, I’m going to see how --
I can’t see out of these, OK.
I’m going to see how many of you at the back of the room
can actually get those things onto the stage.
So the way they work is, you know,
you just put your finger in the thing,
pull them back, and off you go.
So, don’t look backwards. That’s my only recommendation here.
So I want to see how many of you can get these things on the stage.
So come on! There we go, there we go. Thank you. Thank you. Oh.
I have another idea. I wanted to -- there we go.
(Laughter)
There we go.
(Laughter)
Thank you, thank you, thank you.
Not bad, not bad. No serious injuries so far.
(Laughter)
Well, they’re still coming in from the back there;
they’re still coming in.
Some of you haven’t fired them yet.
Can you not figure out how to do it, or something?
It’s not that hard. Most of your kids figure out how to do this
in the first 10 seconds, when they pick it up.
All right. This is pretty good; this is pretty good.
Okay, all right. Let’s -- I suppose we'd better...
I better clear these up out of the way
otherwise I’m going to trip over them.
All right. So the rest of you can save them
for when I say something particularly boring,
and then you can fire at me.
(Laughter)
All right. I think I’m going to take these off now,
because I can’t see a damn thing when I’ve -- all right, OK.
So, ah, that was fun.
(Laughter)
All right, good.
(Applause)
So, OK, so why?
So we have the finger blasters, other people have dinosaurs, you know.
Why do we have them? Well, as I said,
we have them because we think maybe playfulness is important.
But why is it important?
We use it in a pretty pragmatic way, to be honest.
We think playfulness helps us get to better creative solutions.
Helps us do our jobs better,
and helps us feel better when we do them.
Now, an adult encountering a new situation --
when we encounter a new situation we have a tendency
to want to categorize it just as quickly as we can, you know.
And there’s a reason for that. We want to settle on an answer.
Life’s complicated. We want to figure out
what’s going on around us very quickly.
I suspect, actually, that the evolutionary biologists
probably have lots of reasons why we want
to categorize new things very, very quickly.
One of them might be, you know,
when we see this funny stripey thing,
is that a tiger just about to jump out and kill us?
Or is it just some weird shadows on the tree?
We need to figure that out pretty fast.
Well, at least, we did once.
Most of us don’t need to anymore, I suppose.
This is some aluminum foil, right? You use it in the kitchen.
That’s what it is, isn’t it? Of course it is, of course it is.
Well, not necessarily.
(Laughter)
Kids are more engaged with open possibilities.
Now, they’ll certainly -- when they come across something new,
they’ll certainly ask, what is it?
Of course they will. But they’ll also ask, what can I do with it?
And you know, the more creative of them
might get to a really, kind of, interesting example.
And this openness is the beginning of exploratory play.
Any parents of young kids in the audience? There must be some.
Yeah, thought so. So we’ve all seen it, haven’t we?
We’ve all told stories about how on Christmas morning, you know,
our kids end up playing with the boxes
far more than they play with the toys that are inside them.
And you know, from an exploration perspective,
this behavior makes complete sense.
Because you can do a lot more with boxes than you can do with a toy.
Even one like, say, Tickle Me Elmo,
which, despite its ingenuity, really only does one thing,
whereas boxes offer an infinite number of choices.
So again, this is another one of those playful activities,
that as we get older, we tend to forget and we have to relearn.
So another one of Bob McKim’s favorite exercises
is called the "30 Circles Test."
So we’re back to work. You guys are going to get back to work again.
Turn that piece of paper that you did the sketch on,
back over, and you’ll find those 30 circles printed on the piece of paper.
So it should look like this. You should be looking at something like this.
So what I’m going to do, I’m going to give you minute,
and I want you to adapt as many of those circles as you can,
into objects of some form.
So for example, you could turn one into a football,
or another one into a sun. All I’m interested in is quantity.
I want you to do as many of them as you can,
in the minute that I’m just about to give you.
So, everybody ready? OK? Off you go.
Okay. Put down your pencils, as they say.
So, who got more than five circles figured out?
Hopefully everybody? More than 10?
Keep your hands up if you did. 10.
15? 20? Anybody get all 30?
No? Oh! Somebody did. Fantastic.
Did anybody to a variation on a theme? Like a smiley face?
Happy face? Sad face? Sleepy face? Anybody do that?
Anybody use my examples? The sun and the football?
Great. Cool. So I was really interested in quantity.
I wasn’t actually very interested in whether they were all different.
I just wanted you to fill in as many circles as possible.
And one of the things we tend to do as adults, again, is we edit things.
We stop ourselves from doing things.
We self-edit as we’re having ideas.
And some cases. our desire to be original is actually a form of editing.
And that actually isn’t necessarily really playful.
So that ability just to, kind of, go for it and explore lots of things,
even if they don’t seem that different from each other,
is actually something that kids do well, and it is a form of play.
So now, Bob McKim did another very --
another version of this test,
in a rather famous experiment that was done in the 1960s.
Anybody know what this? It’s the peyote cactus.
It’s the plant from which you can create mescaline,
one of the psychedelic drugs.
For those of you around in the '60s you probably know it well.
McKim published a paper in 1966 describing an experiment
that he and his colleagues conducted,
to test the effects of psychedelic drugs on creativity.
So he picked 27 professionals. They were, you know,
engineers, physicists, mathematicians, architects,
furniture designers even, artists.
And he asked them to come along one evening
and bring a problem with them that they were working on.
He gave each of them some mescaline,
and had them listen to some nice, relaxing music for a while.
And then he did what’s called the Purdue Creativity Test.
You might know it as, how many uses can you find for a paper clip?
It’s basically the same thing as the 30 circles thing that I just had you do.
Now, actually, he gave the test before the drugs,
and after the drugs, to see how --
what the difference was in people’s,
sort of, facility and speed with coming up with ideas.
And then he asked them to go away
and work on those problems that they’d brought.
And they’d come up with a bunch of, kind of,
interesting solutions, and actually quite, kind of,
valid solutions to the things that they’d been working on.
And so some of the things that they figured out,
some of these individuals figured out.
In one case a new commercial building and design for houses
that were accepted by clients.
A design of a solar space probe experiment.
A redesign of the linear electron accelerator,
an engineering improvement to a magnetic tape recorder.
You can tell this is a while ago.
The completion of a line of furniture,
and even a new conceptual model of the photon.
So it was a pretty successful evening.
In fact, maybe this experiment was the reason that Silicon Valley
got off to its great start with innovation.
We don’t know, but it may be.
We need to ask some of the CEOs
whether they were involved in this mescaline experiment.
But really, it wasn’t the drugs that were important,
it was this idea that what the drugs did
would help shock people out of their normal way of thinking.
And getting them to, kind of, forget the adult behaviors
that were getting in the way of their ideas.
But it’s hard to break our habits, our adult habits.
At IDEO we have brainstorming rules written on the walls.
Edicts like, "Defer judgment," or "Go for quantity."
And somehow that seems wrong.
I mean, can you have rules about creativity?
Well, it sort of turns out that we need rules
to help us break the old rules and norms
that otherwise we might bring to the creative process.
And we’ve certainly learnt that over time,
you get much better brainstorming,
much more creative outcomes when everybody does play by the rules.
Now, of course, many designers, many individual designers,
achieve this is in a much more organic way.
I think the Eames are wonderful examples of experimentation.
And they experimented with plywood for many years
without necessarily having one single goal in mind.
They were exploring following what was interesting to them.
And they went from designing splints for wounded soldiers
coming out of World War II and the Korean War, I think.
And from this experiment they moved on to chairs.
And through constant experimentation with materials,
developed a wide range of iconic solutions
that we know today, and eventually resulting in,
of course, the legendary lounge chair.
Now, if the Eames had stopped with that first great solution,
then we wouldn’t be the beneficiaries of so many, you know,
wonderful designs today.
And of course, they used experimentation in all aspects of their work.
From films to buildings, from games to graphics.
So they’re great examples, I think, of exploration
and experimentation in design.
Now, while the Eames were exploring those possibilities,
they were also exploring physical objects.
And they were doing that through building prototypes.
And building is the next of the behaviors that I thought I’d talk about.
So the average Western first-grader
spends as much as 50 percent of their play time
taking part in what’s called "construction play."
Construction play -- it’s playful, obviously,
but also a powerful way to learn.
When play is about building a tower out of blocks,
the kid begins to learn a lot about towers.
And as they repeatedly knock it down and start again,
learning is happening as a sort of by-product of play.
It’s classically learning by doing.
Now, David Kelley calls this behavior,
when it’s carried out by designers, "thinking with your hands."
And it typically involves making multiple,
low-resolution prototypes very quickly.
You know, often by bringing lots of found elements together
in order to get to a solution.
One of his earliest projects, the team was kind of stuck,
and they came up with a mechanism by hacking together
a prototype made from a roll on deodorant.
Now, that became the first commercial computer mouse
for the Apple Lisa and the Macintosh.
So they kind of learned their way to that by building prototypes.
Another example is a group of designers
who were working on a surgical instrument with some surgeons.
They were meeting with them, they were talking to the surgeons
about what it was they needed with this device.
And one of the designers ran out of the room
and grabbed a white board marker and a film canister --
which is now becoming a very precious prototyping medium --
and a clothes pin. Taped them all together,
ran back into the room and said, you mean something like this?
And the surgeons grabbed hold of it and said,
well, I want to hold it like this, or like that.
And all of a sudden a productive conversation
was happening about design around a tangible object.
And in the end it turned into a real device.
And so this behavior is all about quickly getting something
into the real world, and having your thinking advanced as a result.
At IDEO there’s a kind of a back-to-preschool feel
sometimes about the environment.
The prototyping carts filled with colored paper
and play dough and glue sticks and stuff.
I mean, they do have a bit of a kindergarten feel to them.
But the important idea is, everything’s to hand. Everything’s around.
So when designers are working on ideas
they can start building stuff, kind of, whenever they want.
They don’t necessarily even have to go
into some kind of formal workshop to do it.
And we think that’s pretty important.
And then the sad thing is, although preschools
are full of this kind of stuff, as kids go through the school system
it all gets taken away.
They lose this stuff that kind of facilitates
this sort of playful, and building mode of thinking.
And of course, by the time you get to the average workplace,
maybe the best construction tool we have
might be the Post-it notes. It’s pretty barren.
But giving project teams and their clients
who they’re working with permission to think with their hands,
quite complex ideas can spring into life
and go right through to execution much more easily.
This is a nurse using a very simple -- as you can see -- plasticine prototype,
explaining what she wants out of a portable information system
to a team of technologists and designers
that are working with her in a hospital.
And just having this very simple prototype
allows her to talk about what she wants in a much more powerful way.
And of course, by building quick prototypes, you know,
we can get out and test our ideas with consumers
and users much more quickly
than if we’re trying to describe them through words.
But what about designing something that isn’t physical?
Something like a service or an experience?
Something which exists as a series of interactions over time?
Instead of building play, this can be approached with role play.
So if you’re designing an interaction between two people
such as, I don’t know, ordering food at a fast food joint
or something, you need to be able to imagine
how that experience might feel over a period of time.
And I think the best way to achieve that,
and get a feeling for any flaws in your design, is to act it out.
So we do quite a lot of work at IDEO
trying to convince our clients of this.
They can be a little skeptical, I’ll come back to that.
But a place, I think, where the effort is really worthwhile
is where people are wrestling with quite serious problems.
Things like education or security or finance or health.
And this is another example in a health care environment
of some doctors and some nurses and designers
acting out a service scenario around patient care.
But you know, many adults
are pretty reluctant to engage with role play.
Some of it’s embarrassment and some of it is because
they just don’t believe that what emerges is necessarily valid.
They dismiss an interesting interaction by saying,
you know, that’s just happening because they’re acting it out.
Research into kid’s behavior actually suggests
that it’s worth taking role playing seriously.
Because when children play a role
they actually follow social scripts quite closely
that they’ve learnt from us as adults.
If one kid plays store, and another one’s playing house,
then the whole kind of play falls down.
So they get used to, quite quickly,
to understanding the rules for social interactions,
and are actually quite quick to point out when they’re broken.
So when, as adults, we role play,
then we have a huge set of these scripts already internalized.
We’ve gone through lots of experiences in life.
And they provide a strong intuition
as to whether an interaction is going to work.
So we’re very good when acting out a solution,
at spotting whether something lacks authenticity.
So role play is actually, I think,
quite valuable when it comes to thinking about experiences.
Another way for us, as designers, to explore role play
is to put ourselves through an experience which we’re designing for,
and kind of project ourselves into an experience.
So here are some designers who are trying to understand
what it might feel like to sleep in a, kind of,
confined space on an airplane.
And so they grab some very simple materials, you can see.
And did this kind of role play, this kind of very crude role play,
just to get a sense of what it would be like for passengers
if they were stuck in quite small places on airplanes.
This is one of our designers, Kristian Simsarian,
and he’s putting himself through the experience of being an ER patient.
Now, this is a real hospital, in a real emergency room.
One of the reasons he chose to take
this rather large video camera with him,
because he didn’t want the doctors and nurses thinking
he was actually sick and sticking something into him
that he was going to regret later.
So anyhow, he went there with his video camera,
and it’s kind of interesting to see what he brought back.
Because when we looked at the video when he got back,
we saw 20 minutes of this.
(Laughter)
And also the amazing thing about this video,
as soon as you see it you kind of immediately
project yourself into that experience.
And know what it feels like, all of that uncertainty
while you’re left out in the hallway
while the docs are dealing with some more urgent case
in one of the emergency rooms, wondering what the heck’s going on.
And so this notion of using role play,
or in this case, kind of living through the experience
as a way of creating empathy,
particularly when you use video, is really powerful.
Or another one of our designers, Altay Sendil,
he’s here having his chest waxed, not because he’s very vain,
although actually he is. No, I’m kidding.
But in order to empathize with the pain that chronic care patients
go through when they’re having dressings removed.
And so sometimes these analogous experiences,
kind of analogous role play, can also be quite valuable.
So when a kid dresses up as a firefighter, you know,
he’s beginning to try on that identity.
He wants to know what it feels like to be a firefighter.
We’re doing the same thing as designers.
We’re trying on these experiences.
And so the idea of role play is both as an empathy tool,
as well as a tool for prototyping experiences.
And you know, we kind of admire people who do this at IDEO anyway.
Not just because they lead to insights about the experience,
but also because of their willingness to explore
and their ability to, kind of, unselfconsciously
surrender themselves to the experience.
In short, we admire their willingness to play.
So playful exploration, playful building and role play.
And those are some of the ways that designers use play in their work.
And so far, I kind of admit, that this might feel
like it’s a message just to go out and play like a kid.
And to certain extent it is, but I want to stress a couple of points.
The first thing to remember is that play is not anarchy.
Play has rules, especially when it’s group play.
When kids play tea party, or they play cops and robbers,
they’re following a script that they’ve agreed to.
And it’s this code negotiation that leads to productive play.
So remember the sketching task we did at the beginning?
The kind of little face, the portrait you did?
Well, imagine if you did the same task with friends
while you were drinking in a pub.
But everybody agreed to play a game
where the worst sketch artist bought the next round of drinks.
That framework of rules would have turned an embarrassing,
difficult situation, into a kind of a fun game.
And as a result, you know, we’d all feel perfectly secure and have a good time --
but because we all understood the rules and we agreed on them together.
But there aren’t just rules about how to play,
there are rules about when to play.
Kids don’t play all the time, obviously.
They transition in and out of it.
And teachers, you know, good teachers spend a lot of time
thinking about how to move kids through these experiences.
And as designers, we need to be able to transition in and out of play also.
And if we’re running design studios
we need to be able to figure out, how can we transition
designers through these different experiences?
I think this is particularly true if we think about the, sort of…
I think what’s very different about design
is that we go through these two very distinctive modes of operation.
We go through a sort of generative mode,
where we’re exploring many ideas.
And then we, kind of, come back together again,
and come back looking for that sort of solution,
and developing that solution.
I think they’re two quite different modes.
Divergence and convergence.
And I think it’s probably in the divergent mode
that we most need playfulness.
Perhaps in convergent mode we need to be more serious.
And so being able to move between those modes
is really quite important. So it’s where there’s a, kind of,
more nuanced version view of play, I think, is required.
Because it’s very easy to fall into the trap that these states are absolute.
You’re either playful, or you’re serious, and you can’t be both.
But that’s not really true. You can be a serious professional adult,
and, at times, be playful.
It’s not an either/or, it’s an and.
You can be serious and play.
So to kind of sum it up, we need trust to play,
and we need trust to be creative, so there’s a connection.
And there are a series of behaviors that we’ve learnt as kids,
and that turn out to be quite useful to us as designers.
They include exploration, which is about going for quantity.
Building and thinking with their hands.
And role play, where acting it out helps us both
have more empathy for the situations in which we’re designing,
and to create services and experiences
that are seamless and authentic.
Thank you very much.
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