“…These self-regulatory functions of inner speaking can adaptively or maladaptively affect how people think and act (Fernyhough, 2016). Empirical studies have broadly focused on the relationships of self-regulatory inner speaking with executive functions, learning, and reasoning (e.g., Munroe, 2022;Wallace, Peng, & Williams, 2017), sports motivation and performance (e.g., Fritsch, Feil, Jekauc, Latinjak, & Hatzigeorgiadis, 2022;McCormick, Meijen, Anstiss, & Jones, 2019), and mental wellbeing (e.g., Hirsch, Perman, Hayes, Eagleson, & Mathews, 2015). While the relationship between creativity and inner speech appears to be understudied, research using experience sampling methods suggest that inner speaking occurs in daily life during activities that are closely related to, or can form part of, the creative thinking process (Morin et al, 2011(Morin et al, , 2018.…”