Justifying Responses Affects the Relationship Between Confidence and Accuracy

被引:0
|
作者
Wright, Daniel B. [1 ]
Wolff, Sarah M. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Nevada Las Vegas, Dept Educ Psychol Leadership & Higher Educ, Las Vegas, NV 89012 USA
关键词
metacognition; assessment; educational psychology; TESTING MEMORY; METACOGNITION; OVERCONFIDENCE; JUDGMENT; BIAS; PACKAGE; FALLACY; MODEL;
D O I
10.1027/1618-3169/a000612
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
How confident a student is about how they answer a question has important education implications. Participants answered 10 mathematics questions and provided their estimates of how likely they got each individual item correct and how many, in total, they answered correctly. They were overconfident in these metacognitive judgments. Some of the participants were asked to justify why their answers were either correct or incorrect prior to making these judgments. This lowered their confidence ratings. They were still overconfident, but less than those in the control group. The instruction also affected the association between the confidence ratings and accuracy. No differences were observed between those asked to justify why their responses were correct versus those asked to justify why their responses were incorrect. Those asked to think about the accuracy of a response had lower confidence. This has important implications for understanding how we construct confidence judgments and within education how student confidence can be affected during assessments.
引用
收藏
页码:144 / 153
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Applied metacognition and separation of confidence and accuracy in correlational studies
    Lazar Stankov
    Metacognition and Learning, 2019, 14 : 509 - 516
  • [42] Framing Affects Scale Usage for Judgments of Learning, Not Confidence in Memory
    England, Benjamin D.
    Ortegren, Francesca R.
    Serra, Michael J.
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-LEARNING MEMORY AND COGNITION, 2017, 43 (12) : 1898 - 1908
  • [43] Illusion of knowledge in statistics among clinicians: evaluating the alignment between objective accuracy and subjective confidence, an online survey
    Camille Lakhlifi
    François-Xavier Lejeune
    Marion Rouault
    Mehdi Khamassi
    Benjamin Rohaut
    Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 8
  • [44] Applied metacognition and separation of confidence and accuracy in correlational studies
    Stankov, Lazar
    METACOGNITION AND LEARNING, 2019, 14 (03) : 509 - 516
  • [45] Association Between Time Spent Interpreting, Level of Confidence, and Accuracy of Screening Mammography
    Carney, Patricia A.
    Bogart, T. Andrew
    Geller, Berta M.
    Haneuse, Sebastian
    Kerlikowske, Karla
    Buist, Diana S. M.
    Smith, Robert
    Rosenberg, Robert
    Yankaskas, Bonnie C.
    Onega, Tracy
    Miglioretti, Diana L.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF ROENTGENOLOGY, 2012, 198 (04) : 970 - 978
  • [46] Eyewitnesses under influence: How feedback affects the realism in confidence judgements
    Allwood, CM
    Knutsson, J
    Granhag, PA
    PSYCHOLOGY CRIME & LAW, 2006, 12 (01) : 25 - 38
  • [47] The accuracy of meta-metacognitive judgments: regulating the realism of confidence
    Buratti, Sandra
    Allwood, Carl Martin
    COGNITIVE PROCESSING, 2012, 13 (03) : 243 - 253
  • [48] Distinct signatures of subjective confidence and objective accuracy in speech prosody
    Goupil, Louise
    Aucouturier, Jean-Julien
    COGNITION, 2021, 212
  • [49] Measuring Decision Accuracy and Confidence of Mock Air Defence Operators
    Adams-White, Jade E.
    Wheatcroft, Jacqueline M.
    Jump, Michael
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED RESEARCH IN MEMORY AND COGNITION, 2018, 7 (01) : 60 - 69
  • [50] Exploring the relationship between simulation model accuracy and complexity
    Robinson, Stewart
    JOURNAL OF THE OPERATIONAL RESEARCH SOCIETY, 2023, 74 (09) : 1992 - 2011