Overconfidence Among Beginners: Is a Little Learning a Dangerous Thing?

Across 6 studies we investigated the development of overconfidence among beginners. In 4 of the studies, participants completed multicue probabilistic learning tasks (e.g., learning to diagnose "zombie diseases" from physical symptoms). Although beginners did not start out overconfident in...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of personality and social psychology 2018-01, Vol.114 (1), p.10-28
Hauptverfasser: Sanchez, Carmen, Dunning, David
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container_title Journal of personality and social psychology
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creator Sanchez, Carmen
Dunning, David
description Across 6 studies we investigated the development of overconfidence among beginners. In 4 of the studies, participants completed multicue probabilistic learning tasks (e.g., learning to diagnose "zombie diseases" from physical symptoms). Although beginners did not start out overconfident in their judgments, they rapidly surged to a "beginner's bubble" of overconfidence. This bubble was traced to exuberant and error-filled theorizing about how to approach the task formed after just a few learning experiences. Later trials challenged and refined those theories, leading to a temporary leveling off of confidence while performance incrementally improved, although confidence began to rise again after this pause. In 2 additional studies we found a real-world echo of this pattern of overconfidence across the life course. Self-ratings of financial literacy surged among young adults, then leveled off among older respondents until late adulthood, where it begins to rise again, with actual financial knowledge all the while rising more slowly, consistently, and incrementally throughout adulthood. Hence, when it comes to overconfident judgment, a little learning does appear to be a dangerous thing. Although beginners start with humble self-perceptions, with just a little experience their confidence races ahead of their actual performance.
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Self-ratings of financial literacy surged among young adults, then leveled off among older respondents until late adulthood, where it begins to rise again, with actual financial knowledge all the while rising more slowly, consistently, and incrementally throughout adulthood. Hence, when it comes to overconfident judgment, a little learning does appear to be a dangerous thing. 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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); PsycARTICLES; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Adults
Confidence
Experience Level
Female
Human
Judgment
Knowledge
Learning
Life course
Literacy
Male
Perceptions
Physical symptoms
Self-Confidence
Self-Perception
Symptoms
Trust
Young adults
title Overconfidence Among Beginners: Is a Little Learning a Dangerous Thing?
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