“…In the present research, we explored differences in creativity in a sample of adults who differed in depressive anhedonia, determined via face‐to‐face structured clinical interviews. As part of a broader study on anhedonia and motivation (Silvia et al, 2020a,b), we included self‐report scales that assessed creative self‐efficacy and identity (Karwowski, Lebuda, & Wisniewska, 2018), self‐rated creativity in different domains (Kaufman, 2012), everyday “little‐c” creative behaviors (Batey, 2007; Dollinger, 2003), and creative achievements (Carson, Peterson, & Higgins, 2005). Time constraints precluded performance measures, such as divergent thinking or humor production, but self‐report measures of creativity offer a well‐rounded view of people’s creative self‐concepts—how they construe their creative abilities, skills, and experiences (Karwowski & Lebuda, 2017)—and their past creative behaviors and achievements (Kaufman, 2019; Silvia, Wigert, Reiter‐Palmon, & Kaufman, 2012).…”