Hindsight bias describes people’s tendency to overestimate how accurately they have predicted an event’s outcome after obtaining knowledge about it. Outcome knowledge has been shown to influence various forms of judgments, but it is unclear whether outcome knowledge also produces a hindsight bias on Judgments of Learning (JOLs). Three experiments tested whether people overestimated the accuracy of their memory predictions after obtaining knowledge about their actual memory performance. In all experiments, participants studied 60 cue-target word pairs, made a JOL for each word pair, and tried to recall the targets in a cued-recall test. In Experiments 1a and 1b, people recollected their original JOLs after attempting to recall each target, t...
In Exp 1, with 379 high school students, small groups vs individuals made hypothetical predictions w...
In Exp 1, with 379 high school students, small groups vs individuals made hypothetical predictions w...
The hindsight bias, a person\u27s tendency to overestimate their ability to predict the outcome of a...
This article presents two experiments that used insight and mathematical problems to investigate whe...
This article presents two experiments that used insight and mathematical problems to investigate whe...
The target of this thesis is to investigate when and why metamemory is accurate or inaccurate. It do...
The target of this thesis is to investigate when and why metamemory is accurate or inaccurate. It do...
The present study investigated the effects of post-outcome information on retrospective judgments. P...
With the benefit of feedback about the outcome of an event, people's recalled judgments are typicall...
We report 4 experiments investigating auditory hindsight bias – the tendency to overestimate the int...
After people have learned a fact or the outcome of an event, they often overestimate their ability t...
After people have learned a fact or the outcome of an event, they often overestimate their ability t...
After people have learned a fact or the outcome of an event, they often overestimate their ability t...
(First Paragraph) The Hindsight Bias Effect (HBE) describes the observation that once people are awa...
(First Paragraph) The Hindsight Bias Effect (HBE) describes the observation that once people are awa...
In Exp 1, with 379 high school students, small groups vs individuals made hypothetical predictions w...
In Exp 1, with 379 high school students, small groups vs individuals made hypothetical predictions w...
The hindsight bias, a person\u27s tendency to overestimate their ability to predict the outcome of a...
This article presents two experiments that used insight and mathematical problems to investigate whe...
This article presents two experiments that used insight and mathematical problems to investigate whe...
The target of this thesis is to investigate when and why metamemory is accurate or inaccurate. It do...
The target of this thesis is to investigate when and why metamemory is accurate or inaccurate. It do...
The present study investigated the effects of post-outcome information on retrospective judgments. P...
With the benefit of feedback about the outcome of an event, people's recalled judgments are typicall...
We report 4 experiments investigating auditory hindsight bias – the tendency to overestimate the int...
After people have learned a fact or the outcome of an event, they often overestimate their ability t...
After people have learned a fact or the outcome of an event, they often overestimate their ability t...
After people have learned a fact or the outcome of an event, they often overestimate their ability t...
(First Paragraph) The Hindsight Bias Effect (HBE) describes the observation that once people are awa...
(First Paragraph) The Hindsight Bias Effect (HBE) describes the observation that once people are awa...
In Exp 1, with 379 high school students, small groups vs individuals made hypothetical predictions w...
In Exp 1, with 379 high school students, small groups vs individuals made hypothetical predictions w...
The hindsight bias, a person\u27s tendency to overestimate their ability to predict the outcome of a...