Abstract
Building on findings that self-uncertainty motivates attempts to restore certainty about the self, particularly in ways that
highlight one’s distinctiveness from others, we show that self-uncertainty, relative to uncertainty in general, increases creative
generation among individualists. In Studies 1 to 3, high (but not low) individualists performed better on a creative generation
task after being primed with self-uncertainty as opposed to general uncertainty. In Study 4, this effect emerged only among
those who were told that the task measured creative as opposed to analytical thinking, suggesting that the positive effects
of self-uncertainty on performance are specific to tasks that bolster perceptions of uniqueness. In Study 5, self-uncertain
individualists experienced a restoration of self-clarity after being induced to think about themselves as more (vs. less)
creative. Implications for compensatory responses to self-uncertainty and factors that influence creativity are discussed.