The evaluative mechanism in Campbell's BVSR framework that identifies and preserves valuable variations after generation — the filter through which masterpieces emerge from the broader volume of creative output.
Selective retention is the second half of Donald Campbell's 1960 creative-thought model: after blind variation generates possibilities without foreknowledge of their value, selective retention evaluates the variations and preserves the ones that work. Simonton's framework treats selective retention as the mechanism that converts the equal-odds baseline into differentiated outcomes. Every creator produces variations at roughly constant probability per attempt; what differs is the refinement of the evaluative mechanism that separates the excellent from the adequate.
Selective Retention
In The You On AI Field Guide
The selective retention mechanism is built through the creative process itself. Each attempt — including the failures, including the mediocre ones, including the works no one remembers — deposits a thin layer of evaluative understanding. The creator learns, through cumulative practice, which combinations feel right before analysis confirms the feeling, which directions are worth pursuing, which outputs should be discarded. This accumulated judgment is what Simonton's career trajectory research shows continuing to develop even as raw productivity declines.