How and when Proactive Vitality Management Promotes Undergraduates’ Creativity? A Conservation of Resources Perspective

Weijun Hua, Jianwei Zhang*, Xingyu Xuan, Mengmeng Fu, Jie Zhou

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    2 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Despite widely highlighting that creative individuals need to be full of vitality to function optimally, previous research neglects the very real possibility that human beings may also need to proactively manage their vitality to ignite creativity. Drawing on the conservation of resources theory, this study explores the impact of proactive vitality management on undergraduates’ creativity through harmonious academic passion, as well as the moderating roles of university creative climate and prevention focus. Evidence from a scenario-based experiment (Study 1) and a multi-wave field survey (Study 2) demonstrated that proactive vitality management positively promoted individual creativity. This relationship was partially mediated by harmonious academic passion. In addition, proactive vitality management enhanced undergraduate students’ creativity via harmonious academic passion in a high university creative climate, whereas the indirect effect was weak when prevention focus was high. Theoretical and practical implications are also discussed, along with study limitations and future research directions.

    Original languageEnglish
    JournalPsychological Reports
    DOIs
    Publication statusAccepted/In press - 2024

    Keywords

    • Proactive vitality management
    • creativity
    • harmonious academic passion
    • prevention focus
    • university creative climate

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