We examined people's beliefs about how well an individual's evaluations can predict the average evaluations of a group and how well a group's average evaluations can predict those of an individual. The individual in question was either the self or a stranger. Subjects believed that the group predicts a stranger better than the stranger predicts the group, but believed that the self predicts the group as well as or better than the group predicts the self This asymmetry in estimates of predictability mirrors asymmetries found by other researchers for similarity judgments, suggesting that beliefs about predictability may be guided by similarity judgments. This may lead to errors in predictions about self and others, including the false consens...
While people’s forecasts of future outcomes are often guided by their preferences (“desirability bia...
Two factors known to affect the use of self in social prediction, target similarity and order of pre...
To benefit from social interactions, people need to predict how their social partners will behave. S...
Four experiments demonstrate that self-knowledge provides a mixed blessing in behavioral prediction,...
In a series of studies, subjects were asked to make predictions about target individuals. Some subje...
Human judgment is basically comparative, with self-judgments in particular being based on social com...
People tend to believe that their own judgments are less prone to bias than those of others, in part...
Two experiments investigated differences in forming impressions of individual and group targets. Exp...
Two experiments investigated differences in forming impressions of individual and group targets. Exp...
People believe that they are better than others on easy tasks and worse than others on difficult tas...
In the present paper, the relationship between illusory superiority (the belief to be better than ot...
The authors examined the consistency of person perception in two domains: agreement (i.e., do two ra...
Biases perpetuate when people think that they are innocent whereas others are guilty of biases. We e...
Two factors known to affect the use of self in social prediction, target similarity and order of pre...
We examine the confidence and accuracy with which people make personality trait inferences and inves...
While people’s forecasts of future outcomes are often guided by their preferences (“desirability bia...
Two factors known to affect the use of self in social prediction, target similarity and order of pre...
To benefit from social interactions, people need to predict how their social partners will behave. S...
Four experiments demonstrate that self-knowledge provides a mixed blessing in behavioral prediction,...
In a series of studies, subjects were asked to make predictions about target individuals. Some subje...
Human judgment is basically comparative, with self-judgments in particular being based on social com...
People tend to believe that their own judgments are less prone to bias than those of others, in part...
Two experiments investigated differences in forming impressions of individual and group targets. Exp...
Two experiments investigated differences in forming impressions of individual and group targets. Exp...
People believe that they are better than others on easy tasks and worse than others on difficult tas...
In the present paper, the relationship between illusory superiority (the belief to be better than ot...
The authors examined the consistency of person perception in two domains: agreement (i.e., do two ra...
Biases perpetuate when people think that they are innocent whereas others are guilty of biases. We e...
Two factors known to affect the use of self in social prediction, target similarity and order of pre...
We examine the confidence and accuracy with which people make personality trait inferences and inves...
While people’s forecasts of future outcomes are often guided by their preferences (“desirability bia...
Two factors known to affect the use of self in social prediction, target similarity and order of pre...
To benefit from social interactions, people need to predict how their social partners will behave. S...