“…Perhaps this is not surprising given that many of the creativity instruments were developed and standardized before the advent of modern psychometric analyses (Fishkin in creativity research, and although limited, their results are promising. These efforts addressed some critical issues in creativity measurement, such as evaluating reliability and validity (Chermahini, Hickendorff, & Hommel, 2012;Karwowski, 2014;Lee, Lee, & Youn, 2005;Primi, 2014;Silvia, 2011;Silvia et al, 2008;Wang, Ho, Cheng, & Cheng, 2014;Zampetakis, 2010), testing domain-specificity of creativity (Barbot, Tan, Randi, SantaDonato, & Grigorenko, 2012;Chen et al, 2006;Silvia, Kaufman, & Pretz, 2009), evaluating the rater's effect on performance assessment (Hung, Chen, & Chen, 2012) and modelling relationships between creativity and other constructs (Nusbaum & Silvia, 2011;Silvia, 2008). Expanding the use of these modern analyses could provide a better understanding of conflicting results in creativity research.…”