Unmasking Dunning-Kruger Effect in Visual Reasoning & Judgment

The Dunning-Kruger Effect (DKE) is a metacognitive phenomenon where low-skilled individuals tend to overestimate their competence while high-skilled individuals tend to underestimate their competence. This effect has been observed in a number of domains including humor, grammar, and logic. In this p...

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Veröffentlicht in:IEEE transactions on visualization and computer graphics 2025-01, Vol.31 (1), p.743-753
Hauptverfasser: Chen, Mengyu, Liu, Yijun, Wall, Emily
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Liu, Yijun
Wall, Emily
description The Dunning-Kruger Effect (DKE) is a metacognitive phenomenon where low-skilled individuals tend to overestimate their competence while high-skilled individuals tend to underestimate their competence. This effect has been observed in a number of domains including humor, grammar, and logic. In this paper, we explore if and how DKE manifests in visual reasoning and judgment tasks. Across two online user studies involving (1) a sliding puzzle game and (2) a scatterplot-based categorization task, we demonstrate that individuals are susceptible to DKE in visual reasoning and judgment tasks: those who performed best underestimated their performance, while bottom performers overestimated their performance. In addition, we contribute novel analyses that correlate susceptibility of DKE with personality traits and user interactions. Our findings pave the way for novel modes of bias detection via interaction patterns and establish promising directions towards interventions tailored to an individual's personality traits. All materials and analyses are in supplemental materials: https://github.com/CAV-Lab/DKE_supplemental.git.
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source IEEE Electronic Library (IEL)
subjects Automobiles
Cognition
Cognitive Bias
Data visualization
Dunning Kruger Effect
Games
Interactions
Metacognition
Personality Traits
Visual analytics
Visual Reasoning
Visualization
title Unmasking Dunning-Kruger Effect in Visual Reasoning & Judgment
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