Tom Stafford
Mind Hacks
Mind Hacks
		I have a guest post for the Research Digest, snappily titled ‘People
 who think their opinions are superior to others are most prone to 
overestimating their relevant knowledge and ignoring chances to learn 
more‘. The paper I review is about the so-called “belief 
superiority” effect, which is defined by thinking that your views are 
better than other people’s (i.e. not just that you are right, but that 
other people are wrong). The finding that people who have belief 
superiority are more likely to overestimate their knowledge is a twist 
on the famous Dunning-Kruger
 phenomenon, but showing that it isn’t just ignorance that predicts 
overconfidence, but also the specific belief that everyone else has 
mistaken beliefs.
Here’s the first lines of the Research Digest piece:
Here’s the first lines of the Research Digest piece:
We all know someone who is convinced their opinion is better than everyone else’s on a topic – perhaps, even, that it is the only correct opinion to have. Maybe, on some topics, you are that person. No psychologist would be surprised that people who are convinced their beliefs are superior think they are better informed than others, but this fact leads to a follow on question: are people actually better informed on the topics for which they are convinced their opinion is superior? This is what Michael Hall and Kaitlin Raimi set out to check in a series of experiments in the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology.Read more here: ‘People who think their opinions are superior to others are most prone to overestimating their relevant knowledge and ignoring chances to learn more‘
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