Background and objectives: Overconfidence in errors is a well-replicated cognitive bias in psychosis. However, prior studies have sometimes failed to find differences between patients and controls for more difficult tasks. We pursued the hypothesis that overconfidence in errors is exaggerated in participants with a liability to psychosis relative to controls only when they feel competent in the respective topic and/or deem the question easy. Whereas subjective competence likely enhances confidence in those with low psychosis liability as well, we still expected to find more 'residual' caution in the latter group. Methods: We adopted a psychometric high-risk approach to circumvent the confounding influence of treatment. A total of 2321 indiv...
Background Cognitive models propose that faulty appraisal of anomalous experiences is critical in de...
Background: Cognitive biases play an important role in the formation and maintenance of delusions. T...
International audienceWe address the question as to whether judgmental overconfidence, as assessed b...
Background and objectives: Overconfidence in errors is a well-replicated cognitive bias in psychosis...
Studies revealed that patients with paranoid schizophrenia display overconfidence in errors for memo...
Research in several domains has revealed that when individuals are asked to estimate the probability...
This open access article is distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) 4.0 license.A n...
Background: Patients with schizophrenia show overconfidence in memory and social cognition errors. T...
A number of recent studies have identified an “overconfidence effect” in psychosis, whereby people w...
AbstractBackgroundPatients with schizophrenia show overconfidence in memory and social cognition err...
It has been reported that people with schizophrenia are frequently overconfident relative to their p...
BACKGROUND: Cognitive models propose that faulty appraisal of anomalous experiences is critical in d...
OBJECTIVES: Schizophrenia participants generate self-reports of their competencies that di...
Impairments in self-assessment in schizophrenia have been shown to have functional and clinical impl...
People use information about their ability to choose tasks. If more challenging tasks provide more a...
Background Cognitive models propose that faulty appraisal of anomalous experiences is critical in de...
Background: Cognitive biases play an important role in the formation and maintenance of delusions. T...
International audienceWe address the question as to whether judgmental overconfidence, as assessed b...
Background and objectives: Overconfidence in errors is a well-replicated cognitive bias in psychosis...
Studies revealed that patients with paranoid schizophrenia display overconfidence in errors for memo...
Research in several domains has revealed that when individuals are asked to estimate the probability...
This open access article is distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) 4.0 license.A n...
Background: Patients with schizophrenia show overconfidence in memory and social cognition errors. T...
A number of recent studies have identified an “overconfidence effect” in psychosis, whereby people w...
AbstractBackgroundPatients with schizophrenia show overconfidence in memory and social cognition err...
It has been reported that people with schizophrenia are frequently overconfident relative to their p...
BACKGROUND: Cognitive models propose that faulty appraisal of anomalous experiences is critical in d...
OBJECTIVES: Schizophrenia participants generate self-reports of their competencies that di...
Impairments in self-assessment in schizophrenia have been shown to have functional and clinical impl...
People use information about their ability to choose tasks. If more challenging tasks provide more a...
Background Cognitive models propose that faulty appraisal of anomalous experiences is critical in de...
Background: Cognitive biases play an important role in the formation and maintenance of delusions. T...
International audienceWe address the question as to whether judgmental overconfidence, as assessed b...