TY - JOUR
T1 - The underlying cognitive mechanisms of the rater effect in creativity assessment
T2 - The mediating role of perceived semantic distance
AU - Guo, Jiajun
AU - Ge, Ying
AU - Pang, Weiguo
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2019/9
Y1 - 2019/9
N2 - It is accepted fact that people often disagree with each other when they evaluate the creativity or originality of a product. At least three types of factors have been found to influence judgements of creativity, including people's own originality, product characteristics, and evaluation criteria. However, little research has systematically investigated those influences, especially their interactions. In addition, the underlying cognitive mechanisms of the influences are still unknown. The purpose of the present study, therefore, was to first examine how evaluations of creativity depend on rater's originality, on the variations in two underlying dimensions of creativity in products – originality and usefulness, and on variations in criteria. A further aim was to investigate the cognitive underpinning of those influences on the basis of both the associated theory of creativity and spreading-activation theory. Two experiments were conducted. In Experiment one, 156 students in a Chinese university completed an Alternative Uses test (AUT) and two creativity ratings tasks using different criteria. The results of Experiment 1 demonstrate that highly original people, compared to their less original counterparts, tend to give lower ratings to others’ ideas 1) when they use explicit criteria, which emphasize the unusual aspect of creativity, to evaluate creative as well as strange ideas, and 2) when they use the implicitly theory of creativity to evaluate strange ideas. In Experiment two, another 151 students completed an AUT task, a distance rating task, and an originality rating task. The results indicate that highly original raters’ tendency of underestimation is more apparent when the products being evaluated are the combinations of remote ideas/concepts, which suggests that perceived semantic distance mediates the effect of rater's originality on ratings of originality.
AB - It is accepted fact that people often disagree with each other when they evaluate the creativity or originality of a product. At least three types of factors have been found to influence judgements of creativity, including people's own originality, product characteristics, and evaluation criteria. However, little research has systematically investigated those influences, especially their interactions. In addition, the underlying cognitive mechanisms of the influences are still unknown. The purpose of the present study, therefore, was to first examine how evaluations of creativity depend on rater's originality, on the variations in two underlying dimensions of creativity in products – originality and usefulness, and on variations in criteria. A further aim was to investigate the cognitive underpinning of those influences on the basis of both the associated theory of creativity and spreading-activation theory. Two experiments were conducted. In Experiment one, 156 students in a Chinese university completed an Alternative Uses test (AUT) and two creativity ratings tasks using different criteria. The results of Experiment 1 demonstrate that highly original people, compared to their less original counterparts, tend to give lower ratings to others’ ideas 1) when they use explicit criteria, which emphasize the unusual aspect of creativity, to evaluate creative as well as strange ideas, and 2) when they use the implicitly theory of creativity to evaluate strange ideas. In Experiment two, another 151 students completed an AUT task, a distance rating task, and an originality rating task. The results indicate that highly original raters’ tendency of underestimation is more apparent when the products being evaluated are the combinations of remote ideas/concepts, which suggests that perceived semantic distance mediates the effect of rater's originality on ratings of originality.
KW - Creativity assessment
KW - Rater effect
KW - Remote association
KW - Semantic distance
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85066400116
U2 - 10.1016/j.tsc.2019.100572
DO - 10.1016/j.tsc.2019.100572
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85066400116
SN - 1871-1871
VL - 33
JO - Thinking Skills and Creativity
JF - Thinking Skills and Creativity
M1 - 100572
ER -