How often are people wrong when they are certain that they know the answer to a question? The studies reported here suggest that the answer is "too often." For a variety of general-knowledge questions (e.g., absinthe is [a] a liqueur or [b] a precious stone), subjects first chose the most likely answer and then indicated their degree of certainty that the answer they had selected was, in fact, correct. Across several different question and response formats, subjects were consistently overconfident. They had sufficient faith in their confidence judgments to be willing to stake money on their validity. The psychological bases for unwarranted certainty are discussed in terms of the inferential processes whereby knowledge is constructed from perceptions and memories.
A.H. Mirza, Nawaf Alampara, Sreekanth Kunchapu, Martiño Ríos-García, Benedict Emoekabu, Aswanth Krishnan, Mara Schilling-Wilhelmi, Macjonathan Okereke, Anagha Aneesh, Mehrdad Asgari, J. Eberhardt, Amir Mohammad Elahi, Hani M. Elbeheiry, M.V. Gil, Christina Glaubitz, Maximilian Greiner, Caroline T. Holick, Tim Hoffmann, Lea C. Klepsch, Yannik Köster, Fabian Alexander Kreth, Jakob Meyer, Santiago Miret,
Adrian Mirza, Nawaf Alampara, Sreekanth Kunchapu, Benedict Emoekabu, Aswanth Krishnan, Tanya Gupta, Macjonathan Okereke, Amir Mohammad Elahi, Mehrdad Asgari, J. Eberhardt, Maximilian Greiner, Caroline T. Holick, Christina Glaubitz, Tim Hoffmann, Lea C. Klepsch, Yannik Köster, Fabian Alexander Kreth, Jakob Meyer, Santiago Miret, Michael Ringleb, Nicole C. Roesner, Ulrich Sigmar Schubert, Leanne M. Stafast, Dinga Wonanke, Michael Pieler,
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