brainstorming, yet understudied. Although ideational benefits of hybrid groups have been
found, studies have rarely focused on its affective/motivational contributions or ability to
select ideas. In a randomized experiment, noninteractive-then-interactive (hybrid) groups
perceived (1) higher goal clarity, engagement, and task attractiveness, and (2) chose more
quality ideas than all-noninteractive groups. Additionally,(3) given the instruction for both …