Emotional Creativity in Art Education: An Exploratory Analysis and Research Trends
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- What was the trend in research during the period analyzed?
- What was the relationship between the journals that developed this theme?
- What were the main scientific collaborations between researchers, countries/territories, and institutions?
- What were the main lines of research developed during the period 1917–2020?
- What are the main future research directions?
2. Theoretical Framework
3. Dataset and Methods
3.1. Data Extraction
- Identification: 112,547 records from the Scopus database were identified, considering “all fields” for each key search term, “all document types”, and all data published in the “data range” (all years—February 2021).
- Screening: The “article title, abstract, and keywords” were designated for each term, so that 109,418 records were excluded.
- Eligibility: Of the 3129 records as document type, only the “articles” were selected to guarantee the quality of the peer review process. In this third step, 845 records were excluded.
- Included: Data were selected in the period “all years–2020”, that is, from the first article published on the subject until the last full year (2020), and only selected, to avoid a distortion of the sample, the subject areas “Arts and Humanities”, “Social Sciences”, and “Psychology”. In this fourth and final phase, 1300 documents were excluded from the 2284 records, so the final sample incorporated 984 articles (open access and non-open access).
3.2. Data Processing
3.3. Keyword Co-Occurrence Analysis
- Link: co-occurrence links between keywords.
- Total link strength: strength (positive numerical value) of each link and, for concurrent links, indicates the number of documents in which two keywords appear together.
- Cluster: set of keywords included in a network map.
- Network map: set of keywords and links.
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. Evolution of Scientific Production
- Cluster 1 (pink, 35%): Child Development (links: 76, total link strength: 2057, citations: 184); Psychological Bulletin (85, 2829, 182); Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders (49, 1205, 139); Developmental Psychology (74, 1397, 108); Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (67, 1323, 101); Science (82, 1142, 95); Plos One (80, 729, 81); Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry (62, 1022, 71); Pediatrics (46, 286, 63); and Health Psychology (42, 541, 62).
- Cluster 2 (green, 22%): Teaching and Teacher Education (73, 1653, 173); Journal of Educational Psychology (75, 3309, 162); Educational Psychologist (76, 2276, 115); Educational Psychology Review (75, 2137, 109); Computers & Education (63, 1001, 104); Learning and Instruction (72, 1988, 99); Computers in Human Behavior (59, 1352, 90); Review of Educational Research (72, 1291, 74); Contemporary Educational Psychology (67, 1446, 67); and Educational Researcher (63, 748, 64).
- Cluster 3 (red, 16%): Personality and Individual Differences (86, 3062, 207); Psychological Review (77, 1374, 95); Cognition and Emotion (79, 1365, 86); Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin (76, 981, 55); Frontiers in Psychology (74, 896, 54); Psychological Science (79, 973, 53); Creativity Research Journal (49, 825, 49); Emotion Review (69, 868, 47); Psicothema (68, 546, 47); and Psychology of Music (41, 448, 41).
- Cluster 4 (yellow, 13%): Journal of Personality and Social Psychology (86, 4860, 310); American Psychologist (81, 1764, 136); Journal of Applied Psychology (73, 1458, 72); Annual Review of Psychology (77, 801, 60); Journal of Business Ethics (31, 944, 48); Academy of Management Learning & Education (32, 813, 46); Academy of Management Review (46, 629, 44); Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes (62, 724, 37); Journal of Organizational Behavior (58, 594, 36); and Journal of Business Research (42, 295, 34).
- Cluster 5 (purple, 8%): Medical Education (64, 2030, 99); Nurse Education Today (40, 465, 70); Journal of Advanced Nursing (64, 550, 67); Academic Medicine (53, 918, 47); Medical Teacher (57, 862, 47); Brain Injury (8, 107, 40); and Journal of Nursing Education (31, 256, 34).
- Cluster 6 (cyan, 6%): International Journal of Science Education (50, 1172, 89); Environmental Education Research (33, 883, 80); Journal of Research in Science Teaching (55, 1087, 72); Science Education (54, 1024, 63); and The Journal of Environmental Education (28, 691, 42).
4.2. Outputs of Driving Agents: Authors, Institutions, and Countries/Territories
- Cluster 1 (pink, 73%) Pekrun, R. (links: 158, total link strength: 7571, citations: 268); Goetz, T. (145, 4055, 132); Goleman, D. (141, 1438, 94); Bandura, A. (142, 1254, 88); and Dewey, J. (106, 495, 79)
- Cluster 2 (green, 16%): Salovey, P. (156, 7665, 227); Mayer, J.D. (151, 5362, 164); Brackett, M.A. (119, 3717, 81); Bisquerra, R. (89,1287, 67); and Furnham, A. (104, 1668, 62).
- Cluster 3 (red, 9%): Brooks-Gunn, J. (12, 1205, 37); Wheelwright, S. (52, 810, 30); Frith, U. (31, 527, 28); Golan, O. (16; 532; 27); and Achenbach, T.M. (41; 357; 26).
- Cluster 4 (yellow, 2%): Treasure, J. (38, 2666, 90); Schmidt, U. (16, 1631, 28); Sepulveda, A.R. (7, 908, 19); and Todd, G. (7, 1093, 18).
- Cluster 1 (pink, 35%): the UK (links: 22, total link strength: 44, documents: 119, citations: 2494), Australia (10, 15, 59, 806), and China (8, 11, 25, 35). This group includes Taiwan (7, 9, 23, 294).
- Cluster 2 (green, 29%): Spain (16, 28, 84, 515), Canada (12, 25, 54, 720), Italy (10, 13, 21, 755), Finland (7, 7, 18, 83), and Israel (5, 5, 11, 447).
- Cluster 3 (red, 15%): Turkey (2, 2, 40, 143), Germany (8, 13, 37, 1024), Austria (4, 6, 12, 188), Brazil (3, 4, 12, 201), and Ireland (4, 6, 12, 323).
- Cluster 4 (yellow, 13%): USA (29, 67, 270, 6290), South Korea (2, 3, 12, 24), Mexico (2, 3, 9, 21), Lebanon (1, 2, 2, 7), and Pakistan (1, 1, 2, 33).
- Cluster 5 (purple, 8%): Netherlands (10, 18, 25, 209), Saudi Arabia (3, 4, 4, 11), Kazakhstan (2, 2, 3, 2), and Ukraine (1, 1, 1, 0).
4.3. Analysis of Keywords: Lines of Research
- Emotion: This line of research has highlighted emotion as a psychophysiological reaction, which represents different modes of adaptation to certain stimuli. Etymologically, the word emotion means impulse, movement, and refers to what moves a person toward something [75,76]. Relating emotion to creativity and art education refers to generating an emotional response in people, through sensory interaction, generating a more pleasant and intimate experience, creating a link that goes beyond simple action or artistic performance [77].
- Higher Education: The second account of knowledge has analyzed higher education as the academic level that refers to the last stage of the formal learning process of an individual [78,79]. The changes in today’s society require professionals enriched from the artistic field in their sensitivity, so that, through their own imaginary, they are creative in their contexts and from their cultures and collaborate in the development of identity in the people who make up the micro and microsocieties, in other words, that they give a sense of humanity and creativity to their professional practice [6].
- Education: This research approach has analyzed the process of facilitating learning or the acquisition of knowledge as well as skills, values, beliefs, and habits [80]. Art education is presented as an area of intervention aimed at the development and construction of the person-learner based on competencies acquired from the artistic culture that encourages the training of each person to develop the aesthetic and artistic sense, whether or not the student is vocationally an artist or wants to be, in the future, a professional of an art [79,81].
- Art: This line of research has analyzed art as a general field of education that provides common educational values linked to the character and meaning of education just like any other educational subject and as a specific development, linked to the conceptual meaning of the area of artistic experience, that is, as an area that is part of the development of the aesthetic and artistic sense [82,83].
- Leadership: This approach questions art education and creativity, understood as tools to increase capacities for leadership, awareness, and policy-making in terms of creative and aesthetic development [15]. Likewise, it has sought to disseminate the individual and social repercussions of art education to sensitize the public to its values and stimulate support for it in the public and private sectors [84].
4.4. Emerging Lines of Research
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Period | Articles | % | Accumulated Articles | % Accumulated |
---|---|---|---|---|
2011–2020 | 774 | 78.66% | 984 | 100.00% |
2001–2010 | 180 | 18.29% | 210 | 21.34% |
1991–2000 | 20 | 2.03% | 30 | 3.05% |
1981–1990 | 5 | 0.51% | 10 | 1.02% |
1971–1980 | 3 | 0.30% | 5 | 0.51% |
… | … | ... | … | … |
1920–1911 | 2 | 0.20% | 2 | 0.20% |
Total | 984 | 100.00% |
Research Institution | A | City, Country | 1st A * | Last A * | Keyword 1 | Keyword 2 | Keyword 3 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Columbia University in the City of New York | 14 | New York, USA | 1998 | 2020 | Emotion | Cognition | Developmental Disorder |
Universitat de Barcelona | 12 | Barcelona, Spain | 2011 | 2020 | Emotional Competence | Emotional Education | Emotional Intelligence |
Helsingin Yliopisto | 12 | Helsinki, Finland | 2008 | 2020 | Motivation | Academic Emotion | Emotion |
King’s College London | 10 | London, UK | 2001 | 2018 | Emotion | Communication | Education |
University of California | 10 | San Francisco, USA | 2010 | 2020 | Emotion | Education | Psychology |
University of Valencia | 9 | Valencia, Spain | 2011 | 2020 | Emotion | Cognition | Well-being |
The University of Manchester | 8 | Manchester, UK | 1999 | 2017 | Emotion | Creativity | Learning |
University of Toronto | 8 | Toronto, Canada | 2009 | 2019 | Art Gallery | Arts | Behavior Management |
The University of Edinburgh | 8 | Edinburgh, UK | 1980 | 2019 | Emotion | Psychology | Learning |
Universitat de Lleida | 8 | Lleida, Spain | 2008 | 2019 | Emotional Competence | Coexistence | Assessment of Emotional Competence |
Cluster (Number, Color) (See Figure 6) | % | Main Keywords | Weight Links | Weight Total Link Strength | Weight Occurrences |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1, pink | 32% | Emotion (*) | 48 | 74 | 52 |
Creativity | 19 | 29 | 23 | ||
Motivation | 11 | 15 | 12 | ||
Depression | 12 | 13 | 11 | ||
Self-Efficacy | 10 | 10 | 11 | ||
Art Education | 8 | 10 | 11 | ||
2, green | 31% | Higher Education (*) | 30 | 46 | 37 |
Emotional Intelligence | 23 | 40 | 34 | ||
Intervention | 21 | 25 | 14 | ||
Emotion Regulation | 18 | 19 | 14 | ||
Stress | 12 | 16 | 12 | ||
Well-Being | 13 | 14 | 10 | ||
3, red | 20% | Education (*) | 41 | 64 | 47 |
Learning | 22 | 34 | 23 | ||
Communication | 20 | 28 | 19 | ||
Empathy | 24 | 31 | 16 | ||
Reflection | 14 | 17 | 13 | ||
Medical Education | 15 | 18 | 11 | ||
4, yellow | 11% | Art (*) | 22 | 31 | 24 |
Nursing Student | 14 | 22 | 17 | ||
Affect | 11 | 12 | 9 | ||
Emotional Labor | 5 | 6 | 7 | ||
Personality | 5 | 9 | 6 | ||
Design | 4 | 4 | 6 | ||
5, purple | 6% | Leadership (*) | 7 | 9 | 8 |
Gender | 11 | 12 | 7 | ||
Emotional Competence | 6 | 6 | 5 | ||
Cognition | 2 | 2 | 5 | ||
Decision Making | 5 | 7 | 4 | ||
Professional Education | 5 | 6 | 4 |
Future Direction of Research | Relevance Score | Main Associated Terms | Description |
---|---|---|---|
Visual ArtEducation | 38.593 | Artistic Fencing Craft Art Art School | It seeks to promote through the various artistic disciplines, transmit, and create more complex elements with visual, expressive, and aesthetic characteristics, both traditional and the newest and unconventional trends offered by new technologies such as digital art, urban art and other more emerging in the last decades [78,85]. |
Affective Paradigm | 25.451 | Affective Domain Cognitive Disability Self Determination | This paradigm attempts to create new ways of investigating emotions from the perspective of art and the social sciences. It is sought that emotions and affections gain strength; and also, interactions, discourses, the body or gender (and its cultural and historical variability), as social and psychic mobilizers; and other powerful knowledge builders [86,87]. |
Metacompetency | 23.263 | Verbal Creativity Positive Education Reliability | This line of research should analyze the internal, spiritual, psychic, and emotional competencies that support the competencies of doing, and without which that doing lacks quality and meaning. This context refers to the underlying values and principles that support the being and doing of a person and their very reason for being [88,89]. For this reason, critical thinking and knowledge in art favors the development of metacompetencies while criticism is an inherent condition of art, of the work of art and aesthetics. The critical or self-critical character toward systems of representation is a fundamental principle of contemporary art and is what allows a work of art to be cataloged and differentiated from any utilitarian object, therefore, the interest in its knowledge and development [37]. |
Expressive Arts Therapy Group | 12.171 | Art Therapist Cognitive Therapy Social Safety | Expressive arts therapy, also known as creative therapies, refers to the use of artistic media as a form of therapy [9]. Unlike traditional art expression, it places its emphasis on the process of creation and not on aesthetic value or the final product. The expressive arts are a powerful way to provoke questions, communicate knowledge, inspire understanding, and transform society [90]. This process invites people, groups, and communities to participate in a certain creative space where, through different artistic modalities, they express, identify, and enhance their emotional resources, in order to strengthen their ability to imagine and transform their feelings into a positive [91,92]. |
Cognitive Empathy | 11.193 | Discrete Emotion Positive Influence Achievement Emotion | Empathy seeks to understand and recognize what the other person is feeling, but always from the intellect, never from one’s own emotion [93]. By relating art education to empathy, results can be obtained in terms of recognizing what another person thinks and vibrating even with what he or she feels. In this sense, this direction will try to analyze how to express and expand the inner world to those around us [94,95]. |
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González-Zamar, M.-D.; Abad-Segura, E. Emotional Creativity in Art Education: An Exploratory Analysis and Research Trends. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 6209. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18126209
González-Zamar M-D, Abad-Segura E. Emotional Creativity in Art Education: An Exploratory Analysis and Research Trends. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(12):6209. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18126209
Chicago/Turabian StyleGonzález-Zamar, Mariana-Daniela, and Emilio Abad-Segura. 2021. "Emotional Creativity in Art Education: An Exploratory Analysis and Research Trends" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 12: 6209. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18126209
APA StyleGonzález-Zamar, M. -D., & Abad-Segura, E. (2021). Emotional Creativity in Art Education: An Exploratory Analysis and Research Trends. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(12), 6209. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18126209