Brainstorming is the problem solving activity that helps
build the skeleton for an idea. It is a thought process that can occur very
quickly or rather slowly. It can happen deliberately and willfully, or
instinctively and automatically. It can happen by itself, as a solo string of
thought activities, or simultaneously with thoughts concerning other matters.
Brainstorming is a method of creative thinking for
stimulating the recollection of thoughts and experiences, for accessing
knowledge that is already within your memory. Your mind is a vast warehouse,
and somewhere in that warehouse are thoughts of every image, person, object,
memory, and place you have ever experienced. Experiences can be first hand ones
like climbing a mountain, second hand ones like reading about climbing a
mountain, or even third hand ones like a friend describing scenes from a movie
about climbing a mountain. For the purpose of brainstorming any can be useful,
although first hand experiences are easier to recall. Some memories are clear,
distinct, and immediate, while others need some kind of stimulus to be remembered.
Brainstorming provides a form of stimulus using your scope of experiences to
provide food for thought.
Brainstorming Techniques
Free Association
Free association is the most obvious brainstorming
technique. However, it is not used as often as it should be, in fact many
people do not know how to think about a problem in an open unrestrained manner.
The key is to think without judging your thoughts, to think freely while
maintaining an association to the problem. An effective way to do this is to
think quickly. One method is to make flash cards. Create a quick thumbnail
sketch or write down a word on a card, next turn the card over so you can’t be
distracted by it, then move on to the next one and repeat the process. This
“out-of-sight-out-of-mind” approach to brainstorming will allow you to
continuously wipe your slate of thoughts clean.
Word/Phrase Listing
A subcategory of free association, word or phrase listing is
one of the quickest ways to generate a body of material that can then be used
individually or in combination with materials generated by using other
techniques to form a practical idea. The key here is to aim for quantity,
forget about quality. The more quickly you can come up with words or phrases
the more likely you will draw out strong personal links to whatever problem you
are thinking about.
Divorced Word/Phrase Listing
Many artists and designers will use word or phrase listing
as a technique for collecting material to draw upon to generate an idea, but
very few will take it a step further and use divorced word or phrase listing.
As the former results in personal links to a problem, which incidentally, may
be biased in one form or another, the divorced approach results in the formation
of much more impersonal and less biased associations. This technique relies on
a word/phrase list and here is how it works. To produce some sketches for an illustrated icon based on
brainstorming an idea, I first produced a word/phrase list; below are six words taken from it.
Clouds Brain Lightening Rain Thought
Bubble Skull
The next step is to further associate using the primary words
as the subject basis.
Clouds >> Sunshine Brain >> Neurons Rain >> Umbrella
Lightening >> Fireworks Thought
Bubble >> Comic Words
Skull >> Head
It is doubtful the associated secondary word references would
have been thought of without applying the divorced word/phrase listing
technique. Instead of only six references, there are now twelve that can be
drawn upon to create an illustrated solution to the problem.
Here are a few sketches suggested by the words.
Neuron notion. © 2013 Don Arday. |
The big bang. © 2013 Don Arday. |
Stormy insight. © 2013 Don Arday. |