| Literature DB >> 30138002 |
Briony D Pulford1, Andrew M Colman2, Eike K Buabang3, Eva M Krockow1.
Abstract
According to the confidence heuristic, people are confident when they know they are right, and their confidence makes them persuasive. Previous experiments have investigated the confidence-persuasiveness aspect of the heuristic but not the integrated knowledge-confidence-persuasiveness hypothesis. We report 3 experiments to test the heuristic using incentivized interactive decisions with financial outcomes in which pairs of participants with common interests attempted to identify target stimuli after conferring, only 1 pair member having strong information about the target. Experiment 1, through the use of a facial identification task, confirmed the confidence heuristic. Experiment 2, through the use of geometric shapes as stimuli, elicited a much larger confidence heuristic effect. Experiment 3 found similar confidence heuristic effects through both face-to-face and computer-mediated communication channels, suggesting that verbal rather than nonverbal communication drives the heuristic. Suggesting an answer first was typical of pair members with strong evidence and might therefore be a dominant cue that persuades. Our results establish the confidence heuristic with dissimilar classes of stimuli and through different communication channels. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2018 APA, all rights reserved).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30138002 PMCID: PMC6166527 DOI: 10.1037/xge0000471
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Psychol Gen ISSN: 0022-1015
Figure 1Example E-FITs used in Experiment 1.
Percentages of Choices of Target and Nontarget Faces in the Pilot Study and Experiment 1 and Self-Rated Confidence in the Choices
| Pilot study | Experiment 1 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target | Nontarget | Target | ||||
| E-FIT # | Percentage choosing | Percentage choosing | Percentage choosing | |||
| Weak-evidence E-FITS | ||||||
| S9 | n/a | 100.00 | 39.97 | 35.71 | 53.82 | |
| M20 | 15.60 | 36.20 | 84.40 | 30.93 | 83.93 | 57.82 |
| N2 | 6.30 | 10.00 | 93.70 | 38.21 | 87.50 | 58.75 |
| L9 | 6.30 | 25.00 | 93.70 | 31.57 | 48.21 | 46.52 |
| S8 | 15.60 | 35.00 | 84.40 | 41.40 | 42.86 | 65.21 |
| M18 | 3.10 | 30.00 | 96.90 | 36.68 | 76.79 | 63.20 |
| N7 | n/a | 100.00 | 35.56 | 67.86 | 54.30 | |
| L2 | 9.40 | 40.00 | 90.60 | 47.07 | 41.07 | 58.07 |
| Average | 7.04 | 29.37 | 92.96 | 37.67 | 60.49 | 57.21 |
| Strong-evidence E-FITS | ||||||
| S2 | 78.10 | 67.72 | 21.90 | 43.57 | 44.64 | 63.09 |
| M5 | 87.50 | 82.21 | 12.50 | 52.50 | 92.86 | 81.16 |
| N5 | 93.80 | 82.00 | 6.20 | 35.00 | 96.43 | 81.82 |
| L5 | 65.60 | 58.81 | 34.40 | 37.27 | 50.00 | 56.89 |
| S4 | 71.90 | 67.83 | 28.10 | 46.11 | 44.64 | 59.71 |
| M3 | 71.90 | 78.17 | 28.10 | 48.56 | 83.93 | 78.64 |
| N1 | 71.90 | 65.65 | 28.10 | 37.22 | 75.00 | 72.91 |
| L4 | 46.90 | 62.33 | 53.10 | 50.00 | 41.07 | 63.27 |
| Average | 73.45 | 70.59 | 26.55 | 43.78 | 66.07 | 69.69 |
Figure 2Example stimuli used in Experiments 2 and 3.
Figure 3The influence of weak and strong evidence on mean confidence in all three experiments, with standard error bars.
Figure 4Percentages of trials in Experiment 3 in which pair members agreed on the alternative associated with strong evidence, agreed on an alternative with weak evidence, or disagreed.