“…For example, recent empirical studies suggest that assessing stable inter‐individual differences in within‐person contingencies (Mischel & Shoda, 1995; see CAPS in Table 3) between personality states and situational demands (i.e., state levels changing systematically with task demand) may improve predictions of work outcomes beyond traditional personality trait assessments (Minbashian, Wood, & Beckmann, 2010; Wood et al, 2019). Moreover, several studies have investigated relations between personality state fluctuations and job performance (e.g., Debusscher, Hofmans, & De Fruyt, 2014, 2016a, 2016b, 2017; Sosnowska et al, 2019b). Guided by Whole Trait Theory (Fleeson & Jayawickreme, 2015; see WTT in Table 3), Lievens et al (2018) used situational judgement tests to examine people’s hypothetical states in response to different work situations and found that intra‐individual variability incrementally predicted job performance beyond traditional trait measures.…”