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Get your creative juices flowing with a pint of beer, say scientists!

Alcohol helps remove parameters which surround a problem, allowing more creative thought, researchers said.

Get your creative juices flowing with a pint of beer, say scientists! Image courtesy: Pixabay

New Delhi: The discourse on the negative effects of alcohol on health is a long-standing, never-ending one. Therefore, it always comes as a surprise when studies emphasise the positives of alcohol intake.

Beer is the world's most widely consumed alcoholic beverage, however, its negative effects on health far outweigh the positives.

However, a study has once again come up with results that favour beer as a way to get rid of creative blocks.

According to the study, drinking a pint of beer may trigger productivity and get your creative juices flowing.

Scientists from the University of Graz in Austria found that people performed better in a range of creative tasks after drinking moderate amount of alcohol.

In one word association test, a pint of beer for men, or around 350 mililitres (ml) for women, increased test scores by around 40 percent.

In the test, participants were given three words and asked to think of a word that can be connected to each – for example, the word 'pit' can be attached to 'peach', 'arm' and 'tar'.

Alcohol helps remove parameters which surround a problem, allowing more creative thought, researchers said.

However, while alcohol boosted creativity it decreased 'executive function'. This may impede tasks that require motor skills, such as painting or dancing.

"Anecdotal reports link alcohol intoxication to creativity," Mathias Benedek, from the University of Gras, was quoted as saying by 'The Telegraph'.

"Alcohol impaired executive control, but improved performance in the Remote Associates Test," said Benedek, lead author of the research was published in the journal Consciousness and Cognition.

"Beneficial effects are likely restricted to very modest amounts of alcohol, whereas excessive alcohol consumption typically impairs creative productivity," he said.

(With PTI inputs)