Literature DB >> 16448310

Skilled or unskilled, but still unaware of it: how perceptions of difficulty drive miscalibration in relative comparisons.

Katherine A Burson1, Richard P Larrick, Joshua Klayman.   

Abstract

People are inaccurate judges of how their abilities compare to others'. J. Kruger and D. Dunning (1999, 2002) argued that unskilled performers in particular lack metacognitive insight about their relative performance and disproportionately account for better-than-average effects. The unskilled overestimate their actual percentile of performance, whereas skilled performers more accurately predict theirs. However, not all tasks show this bias. In a series of 12 tasks across 3 studies, the authors show that on moderately difficult tasks, best and worst performers differ very little in accuracy, and on more difficult tasks, best performers are less accurate than worst performers in their judgments. This pattern suggests that judges at all skill levels are subject to similar degrees of error. The authors propose that a noise-plus-bias model of judgment is sufficient to explain the relation between skill level and accuracy of judgments of relative standing. ((c) 2006 APA, all rights reserved).

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16448310     DOI: 10.1037/0022-3514.90.1.60

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Pers Soc Psychol        ISSN: 0022-3514


  22 in total

1.  Unskilled but subjectively aware: Metacognitive monitoring ability and respective awareness in low-performing students.

Authors:  Marion Händel; Eva S Fritzsche
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2016-02

2.  The contribution of judgment scale to the unskilled-and-unaware phenomenon: how evaluating others can exaggerate over- (and under-) confidence.

Authors:  Marissa K Hartwig; John Dunlosky
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2014-01

3.  The 'unskilled and unaware' effect is linear in a real-world setting.

Authors:  Marina Sawdon; Gabrielle Finn
Journal:  J Anat       Date:  2013-06-19       Impact factor: 2.610

4.  Why the Unskilled Are Unaware: Further Explorations of (Absent) Self-Insight Among the Incompetent.

Authors:  Joyce Ehrlinger; Kerri Johnson; Matthew Banner; David Dunning; Justin Kruger
Journal:  Organ Behav Hum Decis Process       Date:  2008-01-01

5.  Unskilled and unaware in the classroom: College students' desired grades predict their biased grade predictions.

Authors:  Michael J Serra; Kenneth G DeMarree
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2016-10

6.  Preceptors' self-assessment of their ability to perform the learning objectives of an experiential program.

Authors:  Bridget Paravattil
Journal:  Am J Pharm Educ       Date:  2012-11-12       Impact factor: 2.047

7.  Unskilled and optimistic: overconfident predictions despite calibrated knowledge of relative skill.

Authors:  Daniel J Simons
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2013-06

8.  Overconfidence in news judgments is associated with false news susceptibility.

Authors:  Benjamin A Lyons; Jacob M Montgomery; Andrew M Guess; Brendan Nyhan; Jason Reifler
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2021-06-08       Impact factor: 11.205

9.  Confident failures: Lapses of working memory reveal a metacognitive blind spot.

Authors:  Kirsten C S Adam; Edward K Vogel
Journal:  Atten Percept Psychophys       Date:  2017-07       Impact factor: 2.199

10.  Sight over sound in the judgment of music performance.

Authors:  Chia-Jung Tsay
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2013-08-19       Impact factor: 11.205

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