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Overconfidence is universal? : Elicitation of Genuine Overconfidence (EGO) procedure reveals systematic differences across domain, task knowledge, and incentives in four populations

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2018

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Muthukrishna, Michael
Henrich, Joseph
Hamamura, Takeshi
Kameda, Tatsuya
Heine, Steven J.

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PLoS one. Public Library of Science (PLoS). 2018, 13(8), e0202288. eISSN 1932-6203. Available under: doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0202288

Zusammenfassung

Overconfidence is sometimes assumed to be a human universal, but there remains a dearth of data systematically measuring overconfidence across populations and contexts. Moreover, cross-cultural experiments often fail to distinguish between placement and precision and worse still, often compare population-mean placement estimates rather than individual performance subtracted from placement. Here we introduce a procedure for concurrently capturing both placement and precision at an individual level based on individual performance: The Elicitation of Genuine Overconfidence (EGO) procedure. We conducted experiments using the EGO procedure, manipulating domain, task knowledge, and incentives across four populations-Japanese, Hong Kong Chinese, Euro Canadians, and East Asian Canadians. We find that previous measures of population-level overconfidence may have been misleading; rather than universal, overconfidence is highly context dependent. Our results reveal cross-cultural differences in sensitivity to incentives and differences in overconfidence strategies, with underconfidence, accuracy, and overconfidence. Comparing sexes, we find inconsistent results for overplacement, but that males are consistently more confident in their placement. These findings have implications for our understanding of the adaptive value of overconfidence and its role in explaining population-level and individual-level differences in economic and psychological behavior.

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150 Psychologie

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ISO 690MUTHUKRISHNA, Michael, Joseph HENRICH, Wataru TOYOKAWA, Takeshi HAMAMURA, Tatsuya KAMEDA, Steven J. HEINE, 2018. Overconfidence is universal? : Elicitation of Genuine Overconfidence (EGO) procedure reveals systematic differences across domain, task knowledge, and incentives in four populations. In: PLoS one. Public Library of Science (PLoS). 2018, 13(8), e0202288. eISSN 1932-6203. Available under: doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0202288
BibTex
@article{Muthukrishna2018Overc-53721,
  year={2018},
  doi={10.1371/journal.pone.0202288},
  title={Overconfidence is universal? : Elicitation of Genuine Overconfidence (EGO) procedure reveals systematic differences across domain, task knowledge, and incentives in four populations},
  number={8},
  volume={13},
  journal={PLoS one},
  author={Muthukrishna, Michael and Henrich, Joseph and Toyokawa, Wataru and Hamamura, Takeshi and Kameda, Tatsuya and Heine, Steven J.},
  note={Article Number: e0202288}
}
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