Metacognition during unfamiliar face matching

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Metacognition during unfamiliar face matching. / Kramer, Robin; Gous, Georgina; Mireku, Michael O. et al.
In: British Journal of Psychology, Vol. 113, No. 3, 08.2022, p. 696-717.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Kramer, R, Gous, G, Mireku, MO & Ward, R 2022, 'Metacognition during unfamiliar face matching', British Journal of Psychology, vol. 113, no. 3, pp. 696-717. https://doi.org/10.1111/bjop.12553

APA

Kramer, R., Gous, G., Mireku, M. O., & Ward, R. (2022). Metacognition during unfamiliar face matching. British Journal of Psychology, 113(3), 696-717. https://doi.org/10.1111/bjop.12553

CBE

Kramer R, Gous G, Mireku MO, Ward R. 2022. Metacognition during unfamiliar face matching. British Journal of Psychology. 113(3):696-717. https://doi.org/10.1111/bjop.12553

MLA

Kramer, Robin et al. "Metacognition during unfamiliar face matching". British Journal of Psychology. 2022, 113(3). 696-717. https://doi.org/10.1111/bjop.12553

VancouverVancouver

Kramer R, Gous G, Mireku MO, Ward R. Metacognition during unfamiliar face matching. British Journal of Psychology. 2022 Aug;113(3):696-717. Epub 2022 Jan 4. doi: 10.1111/bjop.12553

Author

Kramer, Robin ; Gous, Georgina ; Mireku, Michael O. et al. / Metacognition during unfamiliar face matching. In: British Journal of Psychology. 2022 ; Vol. 113, No. 3. pp. 696-717.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Metacognition during unfamiliar face matching

AU - Kramer, Robin

AU - Gous, Georgina

AU - Mireku, Michael O.

AU - Ward, Rob

PY - 2022/8

Y1 - 2022/8

N2 - Kruger and Dunning (1999) described a metacognitive bias in which insight into performance is linked to competence: poorer performers are less aware of their mistakes than better performers. Competence-based insight has been argued to apply generally across task domains, including a recent report investigating social cognition using a variety of face-matching tasks. Problematically, serious statistical and methodological criticisms have been directed against the traditional method of analysis used by researchers in this field. Here, we further illustrate these issues and investigate new sources of insight within unfamiliar face matching. Over two experiments (total N = 1077), where Experiment 2 was a preregistered replication of the key findings from Experiment 1, we found that insight into performance was multi-faceted. Participants demonstrated insight which was not based on competence, in the form of accurate updating of estimated performance. We also found evidence of insight which was based on competence: the difference in confidence on correct versus incorrect trials increased with competence. By providing ways that we can move beyond problematic, traditional approaches, we have begun to reveal a more realistic story regarding the nature of insight into face perception.

AB - Kruger and Dunning (1999) described a metacognitive bias in which insight into performance is linked to competence: poorer performers are less aware of their mistakes than better performers. Competence-based insight has been argued to apply generally across task domains, including a recent report investigating social cognition using a variety of face-matching tasks. Problematically, serious statistical and methodological criticisms have been directed against the traditional method of analysis used by researchers in this field. Here, we further illustrate these issues and investigate new sources of insight within unfamiliar face matching. Over two experiments (total N = 1077), where Experiment 2 was a preregistered replication of the key findings from Experiment 1, we found that insight into performance was multi-faceted. Participants demonstrated insight which was not based on competence, in the form of accurate updating of estimated performance. We also found evidence of insight which was based on competence: the difference in confidence on correct versus incorrect trials increased with competence. By providing ways that we can move beyond problematic, traditional approaches, we have begun to reveal a more realistic story regarding the nature of insight into face perception.

KW - confidence

KW - Dunning-Kruger effect

KW - face matching

KW - insight

KW - metacognition

U2 - 10.1111/bjop.12553

DO - 10.1111/bjop.12553

M3 - Article

VL - 113

SP - 696

EP - 717

JO - British Journal of Psychology

JF - British Journal of Psychology

SN - 0007-1269

IS - 3

ER -