S-DAT: A Multilingual, GenAI-Driven Framework for Automated Divergent Thinking Assessment
Haase, Jennifer, Hanel, Paul H. P., Pokutta, Sebastian
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
This paper introduces S-DAT (Synthetic-Divergent Association Task), a scalable, multilingual framework for automated assessment of divergent thinking (DT) -a core component of human creativity. Traditional creativity assessments are often labor-intensive, language-specific, and reliant on subjective human ratings, limiting their scalability and cross-cultural applicability. In contrast, S-DAT leverages large language models and advanced multilingual embeddings to compute semantic distance -- a language-agnostic proxy for DT. We evaluate S-DAT across eleven diverse languages, including English, Spanish, German, Russian, Hindi, and Japanese (Kanji, Hiragana, Katakana), demonstrating robust and consistent scoring across linguistic contexts. Unlike prior DAT approaches, the S-DAT shows convergent validity with other DT measures and correct discriminant validity with convergent thinking. This cross-linguistic flexibility allows for more inclusive, global-scale creativity research, addressing key limitations of earlier approaches. S-DAT provides a powerful tool for fairer, more comprehensive evaluation of cognitive flexibility in diverse populations and can be freely assessed online: https://sdat.iol.zib.de/.
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Nov-4-2025
- Country:
- Europe
- Germany > Berlin (0.04)
- United Kingdom > England
- Cambridgeshire > Cambridge (0.04)
- Essex > Colchester (0.04)
- North America > United States
- California > Los Angeles County
- Beverly Hills (0.04)
- New York > New York County
- New York City (0.04)
- California > Los Angeles County
- Oceania > Australia
- Europe
- Genre:
- Research Report
- Experimental Study (0.67)
- New Finding (0.46)
- Promising Solution (0.46)
- Research Report
- Industry:
- Education (0.93)
- Technology: