Taking a social psychological approach to metacognitive judgments, this study analyzed the difference in realism (validity) in confidence and frequency judgments (i.e., estimates of overall accuracy) between one's own and another person's answers to general knowledge questions. Experiment 1 showed that when judging their own answers, compared with another's answers, the participants exhibited higher overconfidence, better ability to discriminate correct from incorrect answers, lower accuracy, and lower confidence. However, the overconfidence effect could be attributable to the lowest level of confidence. Furthermore, when heeding additional information about another's answers the participants showed higher confidence and better discriminati...
Vita.Two studies investigated the relationship between personality variables and the accuracy of con...
If the relationship between confidence and accuracy extended across domains, then one could assess p...
Who we choose to learn from is influenced by the relative confidence of potential informants. More c...
The present study investigated the difference between Actors’ and Observers’ realism in confidence a...
We report three experiments comparing confidence judgments made by actors and by observers. In Exper...
Generally, self-assessment of accuracy in the cognitive domain produces overconfidence, whereas self...
This paper addresses measurement and conceptual issues related to the realism of people’s confidence...
This dissertation investigates the realism in people's confidence judgments. Study I investigated wh...
The overconfidence observed in calibration studies has recently been questioned on both psychologica...
Tests of accuracy in interpersonal perception take many forms. Often, such tests use designs and sco...
The present study investigated differences in judgments of one's own and others' knowledge (the own-...
Experimental interest in human decision making has been fertile in the past two decades. It is gene...
A common social comparison bias—the better-than-average-effect—is frequently described as psychologi...
Humans can not only perform some visual tasks with great precision, they can also judge how good the...
This thesis is about the human ability to share and combine representations of the uncertainty assoc...
Vita.Two studies investigated the relationship between personality variables and the accuracy of con...
If the relationship between confidence and accuracy extended across domains, then one could assess p...
Who we choose to learn from is influenced by the relative confidence of potential informants. More c...
The present study investigated the difference between Actors’ and Observers’ realism in confidence a...
We report three experiments comparing confidence judgments made by actors and by observers. In Exper...
Generally, self-assessment of accuracy in the cognitive domain produces overconfidence, whereas self...
This paper addresses measurement and conceptual issues related to the realism of people’s confidence...
This dissertation investigates the realism in people's confidence judgments. Study I investigated wh...
The overconfidence observed in calibration studies has recently been questioned on both psychologica...
Tests of accuracy in interpersonal perception take many forms. Often, such tests use designs and sco...
The present study investigated differences in judgments of one's own and others' knowledge (the own-...
Experimental interest in human decision making has been fertile in the past two decades. It is gene...
A common social comparison bias—the better-than-average-effect—is frequently described as psychologi...
Humans can not only perform some visual tasks with great precision, they can also judge how good the...
This thesis is about the human ability to share and combine representations of the uncertainty assoc...
Vita.Two studies investigated the relationship between personality variables and the accuracy of con...
If the relationship between confidence and accuracy extended across domains, then one could assess p...
Who we choose to learn from is influenced by the relative confidence of potential informants. More c...