Abstract
External information stimuli are crucial for humans to reintegrate knowledge and activate cross-disciplinary thinking. This study investigates how the external information environment affects LLMs' cross-disciplinary thinking through analyzing generated interdisciplinary lay summaries. The interdisciplinary lay summary, building on traditional lay summaries for non-specialists, integrates intersection interpretation and cross-inspiration to assess convergent and divergent thinking. This study utilizes general abstracts and lay summaries to create contexts of deep knowledge and broad knowledge. By comparing intersection interpretations and cross-inspirations generated by LLMs under different information input combinations, we explore the external information environment's influence on cross-disciplinary thinking. ChatGPT-4.0 and Claude3 are used in this study. Findings indicate that simultaneous access to deep and broad knowledge enhances LLMs' convergent thinking, while intersection interpretations foster divergent thinking. Furthermore, a modest correlation exists between the external information environment and divergent thinking. This study advances the LLMs' application in cross-disciplinary research.