The perils of overconfidence
Overestimating one's abilities can have hazardous consequences. The overconfident investment banker may lose millions on a "can't-miss" start up or a driver who's had one too many may insist on making it home in the car. Research has backed up this notion but with one glaring problem: It relies on participants to give accurate reports of their own confidence. But Pascal Mamassian, a researcher at CNRS and Université Paris Descartes, France, believes he has found a way to circumvent this problem. In a paper published in the June issue of Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, Mamassian demonstrates that overconfidence can be revealed using a natural and objective visuo-motor task.
Participants in Mamassian's study sat at a computer and were asked to press a key in synchrony with a visual "blob" that would appear on the screen. Participants would be awarded points if they succeeded and docked points if they pressed the key prematurely or too late.
Mamassian then used a mathematical model to examine how participants would need to adjust their key tapping strategy in order to maximize their gain and minimize their loss.
Mamassian found that participants routinely failed to aim toward the optimal time, instead displaying overconfidence in their action. Specifically, "They underestimated the magnitude of their uncertainty and the cost of their error," he writes.
Because of the objective nature of the task, Mamassian suggests "Overconfidence is not limited to the realm of subjective beliefs and cognitive judgments but appears instead to reflect a general characteristic of human decision making."
Source: Association for Psychological Science
Related
- Are overconfident CEOs born or made? asks Management Insights studyWed, 11 Jun 2008, 17:35:51 EDT
- Businesspeople who are too sure of their abilities are less savvy entrepreneurs: New studyTue, 13 May 2008, 10:14:40 EDT
- The "hole" storyFri, 14 Nov 2008, 11:15:12 EST
- People more likely to overestimate their credit qualityMon, 2 Jun 2008, 15:42:38 EDT
- Sunburn alert: UVB does more damage to DNA than UVATue, 1 Jul 2008, 11:31:40 EDT
Share
Other sources
- The perils of overconfidencefrom Science CentricTue, 1 Jul 2008, 11:28:36 EDT
- The Perils Of Overconfidencefrom Science DailyMon, 30 Jun 2008, 23:28:09 EDT
- The perils of overconfidencefrom PhysorgMon, 30 Jun 2008, 16:21:49 EDT
Latest Science Newsletter
Get the latest and most popular science news articles of the week in your Inbox!Next article
Watermelon may have Viagra-effectPrevious article
Tree-killing fungus officially named by scientistsLatest breaking news
- Caltech researchers find ancient climate cycles recorded in Mars rocksThu, 4 Dec 2008, 14:37:21 EST
- Happiness is a collective -- not just individual -- phenomenonThu, 4 Dec 2008, 19:44:13 EST
- Myth about 'dirty old men' supported by scienceThu, 4 Dec 2008, 10:33:05 EST
Popular science news articles
- Myth about 'dirty old men' supported by science
- Largest study of fertility patients shows concerns about embryo disposition
- Researcher designs robot that jumps like a grasshopper
- Mysteries of Venus revealed at wavelengths invisible to human eyes
- Crystallography reveals the 3-D structure of mammalian sperm receptor
- Scientists produce illusion of body-swapping
- EEGs show brain differences between poor and rich kids
- Too much commitment may be unhealthy for relationships, UH psychology professor says
- Dogs chase efficiently, but cats skulk counterintuitively
- Calcium and vitamin D may not be the only protection against bone loss