Scholars conceive of intellectual humility (IH) as an accurate sense of one’s limitations and strengths. Presumably, awareness of one’s reputation concerning IH would be included in the epistemic domain, meaning those high in IH should realize that how they are perceived by others. These studies empirically test this conception of IH by using interpersonal perception paradigms originally designed to examine metaperceptions and meta-accuracy, or the extent to which people are aware of how they are perceived by others. If the current understanding of IH is accurate, then someone with high IH should have a more accurate impression of how intellectually humble other people perceive them to be. Combining IH, metaperception, and meta-accuracy all...