2023
DOI: 10.1037/aca0000540
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Self-regulation for creative activity: The same or different across domains?

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Cited by 21 publications
(14 citation statements)
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References 113 publications
(193 reference statements)
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“…Recent developments in the field have led to a new theoretical framework of creative self-regulation Zielińska et al, 2021;Zielińska, Forthmann et al, 2022; Urban, 2022). More importantly, more accurate self-evaluation of one's own ideas is related to higher creativity (Grohman et al, 2006;Karwowski et al, 2020;Pesout & Nietfeld, 2021; Urban & Urban, 2021).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Recent developments in the field have led to a new theoretical framework of creative self-regulation Zielińska et al, 2021;Zielińska, Forthmann et al, 2022; Urban, 2022). More importantly, more accurate self-evaluation of one's own ideas is related to higher creativity (Grohman et al, 2006;Karwowski et al, 2020;Pesout & Nietfeld, 2021; Urban & Urban, 2021).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The higher-order thinking has long been a topic of discussion in philosophy because of its' perplexing nature (Rosenthal, 1993;White, 1988). As a practical consequence, the creativity research shows only a small correlation between offline measures of creative metacognition and actual creative performance (Mevarech & Paz-Baruch, 2022; Urban & Urban, in preparation; Zielińska, Forthmann et al;2022). As Snyder et al (2019) point out in their systematic review, the ever-increasing use of self-reported questionnaires in creativity research may be therefore problematic (see also Craig et al, 2020, for a systematic review on the use of self-report questionnaires in metacognition research).…”
Section: Off-line Measures Of Creative Metacognition: Self-reported Q...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While many aspects of inner speaking can characterize and affect idea generation, such as the role of dialogue or how condensed inner speaking is (de Rooij, 2022b), the role of inner speaking in self‐regulation might be particularly impactful. Self‐regulation broadly entails the strategies that people use to adaptively influence their thinking, emotional, and motivational states (Ivcevic & Nusbaum, 2017), and explains a large portion of the variance in creative activity and achievement (Zielińska, Forthmann, Lebuda, & Karwowski, 2023). Typically more so than classical predictors of creativity, such as divergent thinking (Said‐Metwaly, Taylor, Camarda, & Barbot, 2022).…”
Section: Inner Speakingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is in line with a recent study on idea selection by de Rooij (2022a), whose findings indicated that people who engaged more frequently in self‐critical, and less frequently in self‐reinforcing, inner speaking, also had less confidence in the quality of their evaluations – above and beyond the frequency of negative and positive evaluations that occurred during idea evaluation. More generally, re‐evaluating positive and negative events during idea generation has also been shown to influence creativity during idea generation (de Rooij, Corr, & Jones, 2015, 2017; Zhu, Bauman, & Young, 2023), and self‐regulation of emotions and dealing with obstacles predicts creative activity and achievement (Zielińska et al., 2023). It follows that self‐reinforcing inner speaking increases the degree of originality and usefulness people attribute to their ideas, over and above the elicited effect of predicted originality and usefulness on the degree of originality and usefulness people attribute to their ideas (H3).…”
Section: Inner Speakingmentioning
confidence: 99%
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