Articles, White Papers, Reports, Notes
As we discover great new articles on creativity, innovation, how the mind works, learning, intelligence and more we will either post or summarise them here. Where papers are copyrighted we will endeavour to provide the links to them, and if you have an article you would like to publish with us, please send a copy of it to bill@mindwerx.com and we’ll get back you as quickly as possible.
In future the full collection of Mindwerx Articles and White Papers will be made available to subscribers and existing corporate clients participating in our Blended or Online programs.
Wherever possible, a Wordle.net word cloud has been created for each article so that you can see the key words contained in the article.
Articles and papers currently available are listed on the navigation area on the right side of this page. And if you spot an article or paper that you think we should include here please let us know on bill@mindwerx.com
Weird Rules Creativity
Title: THE WEIRD RULES OF CREATIVITY. Authors: Sutton, Robert I. Source: Harvard Business Review; Sep2001, Vol. 79 Issue 8, p94, 10p Document Type: Article (The above image is a Wordle cloud of the full article)
Hows Your Climate Innovation
Title : How’s Your Climate for Innovation? Author: Charles W. Prather, Ph.D. Bio: Dr. Prather was a research management chemist at DuPont before managing DuPont’s Center for Creativity and Innovation. Through CW Prather Associates, in Annapolis,
Innovation Do Australias Big Companies Get It
(For Online Academy Students) The attached article by Dr Rowan Gilmore, CEO of the Australian Institute for Commercialisation raises some interesting points about the focus on innovation in Australia. Taking the lead from the Business Council
Qwerty Mentality
The QWERTY Mentality Have you ever wondered why people you work with resist change, particularly any sort of unique or innovative change? Well it may come down to what we call the QWERTY Mentality. This
Spotlight Innovation Harvard Business Review
Are you like us - you love the Harvard Business Review but find it a bit expensive to keep up the subscription? One of our USA university students (we do a fully online undergraduate course in