“…In other areas of empirical work within the psychological and education sciences, it is common to employ close-ended and selected-response type measures such as multiple-choice knowledge tests (e.g., McMullen, Hannula-Sormunen, Lehtinen, & Siegler, 2022) or Likert-style self-report measures (e.g., Coleman, Dong, Dumas, Owen, & Kopta, 2022). Although creativity researchers have fruitfully utilized such selected-response assessments (e.g., the Remote Associates Test; Mednick, 1962), creativity research in general is characterized by the collection and interpretation of open-ended and ill-structured data wherein tasks and assessments are administered to participants, and participants respond to those stimuli by positing ideas in either a spoken, written, or drawing format (Barbot, Hass, & Reiter-Palmon, 2019).…”