“…NCC describes the individual's desire to achieve closure in UNCERTAINTY AND IDENTITY 9 order to resolve situational uncertainty or to avoid closure and preserve ambiguity; as with IU and IA, this motivation is located along a continuum (Rosen et al, 2014). While these three constructs overlap, they also capture slightly different aspects of uncertainty-related cognition, affect, and behavior, and all may play an important role in understanding how individual designers interact with uncertainty in the design space.Strong empirical findings link high IU (and high IA to a lesser extent) with affective, cognitive, and behavioral outcomes such as clinically-significant anxiety and depression, increased stress, maladaptive coping, lower quality of life, avoidance of novel situations, information processing and recall biases (favoring absolutists interpretations and recall of uncertainty-marked information), diminished behavioral performance, and impulsive decisionmaking (Birrell, Meares, Wilkinson, & Freeston, 2011;Dugas et al, 2005;Erez & Nouri, 2010;Kornilova & Kornilov, 2010;Luhmann, Ishida, & Hajcak, 2011; Rosen et al, 2014). Some studies have also shown that a high tolerance for uncertainty is associated with greater creativity (Kornilova & Kornilov, 2010;Erez & Nouri, 2010).…”