This Ph.D. thesis includes a collection of four research papers focused on the journey of novelty in evaluative processes: various experiments are employed to look at how individual traits, social factors and framing of ideas shape novelty’s recognition. This project aims to increase the understanding of the underlying mechanisms in audience’s evaluation processes of novelty – an area of scholarly inquiry that has received less attention with respect to the generation of novelty (Hennessey & Amabile, 2010; Anderson, Potočnik & Zhou, 2014; Berg 2016; Boudreau, Guinan, Lakhani, & Riedl, 2016; Cattani, Ferriani & Lanza, 2017; Mueller, Melwani, Loewenstein & Deal, 2017; Zhou, Wang, Song, & Wu, 2017) – by providing theoretical and empirical cont...