<p>The hypercorrection effect refers to the finding that high-confidence errors are more likely to be corrected after feedback than are low-confidence errors (Butterfield & Metcalfe, 2001). In 5 experiments I examine the hypercorrection effect, offer possible explanations for why the effect occurs, and examine the durability of the effect. In Experiment 1, I replicate the hypercorrection effect and show that delaying the feedback does not reduce the effect. In a secondary item analysis I also show that the effect is not caused by "tricky" questions. In Experiments 2 and 3, I show that subjects are more likely to remember the source of the feedback after both high-confidence errors and low-confidence correct responses. This suggests that it ...
Objective: Recent literature proposes that repeated checking increases familiarity with the material...
Overconfident people should be surprised that they are so often wrong. Are they? Three studies exami...
How does overconfidence arise and how does it persist in the face of experience and feedback? In an ...
Correcting errors based on corrective feedback is essential to successful learning. Previous studies...
The hypercorrection effect, which refers to the finding that errors committed with high confidence a...
In five experiments, we examined the conditions under which participants remembered true and false i...
Previous studies investigating posttest feedback have generally conceptualized feedback as a method ...
Misconceptions about science are often not corrected during study when they are held with high confi...
Despite the intuition that strongly held beliefs are particularly difficult to change, the data on e...
Among neurotypical adults, errors made with high confidence (i.e. errors a person strongly believed ...
Successfully retrieving information protects it against later forgetting. Failed retrieval attempts ...
Errors in simple choice tasks result in systematic changes in the response time and accuracy of subs...
A mirror effect can be produced by manipulating word class (e.g., high vs. low frequency) or by mani...
People’s feelings of confidence in the correctness of their knowledge while answering a knowledge te...
Most cognitive theories assume that confidence and choice happen simultaneously and are based on the...
Objective: Recent literature proposes that repeated checking increases familiarity with the material...
Overconfident people should be surprised that they are so often wrong. Are they? Three studies exami...
How does overconfidence arise and how does it persist in the face of experience and feedback? In an ...
Correcting errors based on corrective feedback is essential to successful learning. Previous studies...
The hypercorrection effect, which refers to the finding that errors committed with high confidence a...
In five experiments, we examined the conditions under which participants remembered true and false i...
Previous studies investigating posttest feedback have generally conceptualized feedback as a method ...
Misconceptions about science are often not corrected during study when they are held with high confi...
Despite the intuition that strongly held beliefs are particularly difficult to change, the data on e...
Among neurotypical adults, errors made with high confidence (i.e. errors a person strongly believed ...
Successfully retrieving information protects it against later forgetting. Failed retrieval attempts ...
Errors in simple choice tasks result in systematic changes in the response time and accuracy of subs...
A mirror effect can be produced by manipulating word class (e.g., high vs. low frequency) or by mani...
People’s feelings of confidence in the correctness of their knowledge while answering a knowledge te...
Most cognitive theories assume that confidence and choice happen simultaneously and are based on the...
Objective: Recent literature proposes that repeated checking increases familiarity with the material...
Overconfident people should be surprised that they are so often wrong. Are they? Three studies exami...
How does overconfidence arise and how does it persist in the face of experience and feedback? In an ...