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  1. Awareness of time distortions and its relation with time judgment: A metacognitive approach.Mathilde Lamotte, Marie Izaute & Sylvie Droit-Volet - 2012 - Consciousness and Cognition 21 (2):835-842.
    The perception of time cannot be reduced to a simple percept produced by an internal clock. The aim of the present study was therefore to investigate the role of the individual consciousness of time on temporal judgments. In the present study, the participants’ awareness of attention-related time distortions was assessed using a metacognitive questionnaire. The participants were also required to verbally judge a series of stimulus durations in a single or a dual task condition. The results revealed that time was (...)
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  • The role of metacognition in prospective memory: Anticipated task demands influence attention allocation strategies.Jan Rummel & Thorsten Meiser - 2013 - Consciousness and Cognition 22 (3):931-943.
    The present study investigates how individuals distribute their attentional resources between a prospective memory task and an ongoing task. Therefore, metacognitive expectations about the attentional demands of the prospective-memory task were manipulated while the factual demands were held constant. In Experiments 1a and 1b, we found attentional costs from a prospective-memory task with low factual demands to be significantly reduced when information about the low to-be-expected demands were provided, while prospective-memory performance remained largely unaffected. In Experiment 2, attentional monitoring in (...)
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  • The Suppositional Ramsey Test and Decision-Instability.Simone Duca - 2011 - Topoi (1):53-57.
    Abstract I analyse the relationship between the Ramsey Test (RT) for the acceptance of indicative conditionals and the so-called problem of decision-instability. In particular, I argue that the situations which allegedly bring about this problem are troublesome just in case the relevant conditionals are evaluated by non-suppositional versions, e.g. causal/evidential, of the test. In contrast, a suppositional RT, by highlighting the metacognitive nature of the evaluation of indicative conditionals, allows an agent to run a simulation of such evaluation, without yet (...)
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  • Metacognition and mindreading: Judgments of learning for Self and Other during self-paced study.Asher Koriat & Rakefet Ackerman - 2010 - Consciousness and Cognition 19 (1):251-264.
    The relationship between metacognition and mindreading was investigated by comparing the monitoring of one’s own learning and another person’s learning . Previous studies indicated that in self-paced study judgments of learning for oneself are inversely related to the amount of study time invested in each item. This suggested reliance on the memorizing-effort heuristic that shorter ST is diagnostic of better recall. In this study although an inverse ST–JOL relationship was observed for Self, it was found for Other only when the (...)
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  • Conscious and unconscious metacognition: A rejoinder.Asher Koriat & Ravit Levy-Sadot - 2000 - Consciousness and Cognition 9 (2):193-202.
    In this rejoinder we clarify several issues raised by the commentators with the hope of resolving some disagreements. In particular, we address the distinction between information-based and experience-based metacognitive judgments and the idea that memory monitoring may be mediated by direct access to internal representations. We then examine the possibility of unconscious metacognitive processes and expand on the critical role that conscious metacognitive feelings play in mediating between unconscious activations and explicit-controlled action. Finally, several open questions are articulated for further (...)
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  • The feeling of knowing: Some metatheoretical implications for consciousness and control.Asher Koriat - 2000 - Consciousness and Cognition 9 (2):149-171.
    The study of the feeling of knowing may have implications for some of the metatheoretical issues concerning consciousness and control. Assuming a distinction between information-based and experience-based metacognitive judgments, it is argued that the sheer phenomenological experience of knowing (''noetic feeling'') occupies a unique role in mediating between implicit-automatic processes, on the one hand, and explicit-controlled processes, on the other. Rather than reflecting direct access to memory traces, noetic feelings are based on inferential heuristics that operate implicitly and unintentionally. Once (...)
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  • Aesthetic Feelings in Scientific Reasoning.M. Miyata-Sturm - 2024 - Teorema: International Journal of Philosophy (XLIII/1):5-27.
    Scientists regularly invoke broadly aesthetic properties like elegance and simplicity when evaluating theories, but why should we expect aesthetic pleasure to signal an epistemic good? I argue that aesthetic judgements in science are best understood as a special case of affective cognition, and that the feelings on which these judgements are based are the upshots of metacognitive monitoring of the quality of our engagement with theory and evidence. Finding a theory beautiful fallibly signals that it fits well with our background (...)
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  • Initial judgment of solvability: integrating prior expectations with experience-based heuristic cues.Tirza Lauterman & Rakefet Ackerman - 2024 - Thinking and Reasoning 30 (1):135-168.
    Initial Judgment of Solvability (iJOS) is a metacognitive judgment that reflects solvers’ first impression as to whether a problem is solvable. We hypothesized that iJOS is inferred by combining prior expectations about the entire task with heuristic cues derived from each problem’s elements. In two experiments participants first provided quick iJOSs for all problems, then attempted to solve them. We manipulated expectations by changing the proportion of solvable problems conveyed to participants, 33%, 50%, or 66%, while the true proportion was (...)
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  • Investigating the replicability and boundary conditions of the mnemonic advantage for disgust.John T. West & Neil W. Mulligan - forthcoming - Cognition and Emotion:1-21.
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  • Seeds of self-knowledge: noetic feelings and metacognition.Jerome Dokic - 2012 - In Michael J. Beran, Johannes Brandl, Josef Perner & Joëlle Proust (eds.), The foundations of metacognition. Oxford University Press. pp. 302--321.
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  • How we know our own minds: The relationship between mindreading and metacognition.Peter Carruthers - 2009 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 32 (2):121-138.
    Four different accounts of the relationship between third-person mindreading and first-person metacognition are compared and evaluated. While three of them endorse the existence of introspection for propositional attitudes, the fourth (defended here) claims that our knowledge of our own attitudes results from turning our mindreading capacities upon ourselves. Section 1 of this target article introduces the four accounts. Section 2 develops the “mindreading is prior” model in more detail, showing how it predicts introspection for perceptual and quasi-perceptual (e.g., imagistic) mental (...)
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  • Diminished episodic memory awareness in older adults: Evidence from feeling-of-knowing and recollection.Céline Souchay, Chris J. A. Moulin, David Clarys, Laurence Taconnat & Michel Isingrini - 2007 - Consciousness and Cognition 16 (4):769-784.
    The ability to reflect on and monitor memory processes is one of the most investigated metamemory functions, and one of the important ways consciousnesses interacts with memory. The feeling-of-knowing is one task used to evaluate individual’s capacity to monitor their memory. We examined this reflective function of metacognition in older adults. We explored the contribution of metacognition to episodic memory impairment, in relation to the idea that older adults show a reduction in memory awareness characteristic of episodic memory. A first (...)
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  • Idealization in Epistemology: A Modest Modeling Approach, by Daniel Greco. [REVIEW]David Thorstad - forthcoming - Mind.
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  • Millikan’s consistency testers and the cultural evolution of concepts.Nicholas Shea - 2023 - Evolutionary Linguistic Theory 5 (1):79-101.
    Ruth Millikan has hypothesised that human cognition contains ‘consistency testers’. Consistency testers check whether different judgements a thinker makes about the same subject matter agree or conflict. Millikan’s suggestion is that, where the same concept has been applied to the world via two routes, and the two judgements that result are found to be inconsistent, that makes the thinker less inclined to apply those concepts in those ways in the future. If human cognition does indeed include such a capacity, its (...)
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  • Epistemic feelings, metacognition, and the Lima problem.Nathaniel Greely - 2021 - Synthese 199 (3-4):6803-6825.
    Epistemic feelings like tip-of-the-tongue experiences, feelings of knowing, and feelings of confidence tell us when a memory can be recalled and when a judgment was correct. Thus, they appear to be a form of metacognition, but a curious one: they tell us about content we cannot access, and the information is supplied by a feeling. Evaluativism is the claim that epistemic feelings are components of a distinct, primitive metacognitive mechanism that operates on its own set of inputs. These inputs are (...)
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  • Cognitive phenomenology and metacognitive feelings.Santiago Arango-Muñoz - 2018 - Mind and Language 34 (2):247-262.
    The cognitive phenomenology thesis claims that “there is something it is like” to have cognitive states such as believ- ing, desiring, hoping, attending, and so on. In support of this idea, Goldman claimed that the tip-of-the-tongue phe- nomenon can be considered as a clear-cut instance of non- sensory cognitive phenomenology. This paper reviews Goldman's proposal and assesses whether the tip-of-the- tongue and other metacognitive feelings actually constitute an instance of cognitive phenomenology. The paper will show that psychological data cast doubt (...)
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  • Confidence judgments in syllogistic reasoning: the role of consistency and response cardinality.Igor Bajšanski, Valnea Žauhar & Pavle Valerjev - 2018 - Thinking and Reasoning 25 (1):14-47.
    ABSTRACTIn two experiments, we examined the resolution of confidence judgments in syllogistic reasoning and their heuristic bases. Based on the assumptions of Koriat's Self-Consistency Model of confidence, we expected the confidence judgments to be related to conclusion consensuality, reflecting the role of consistency as a heuristic cue to confidence. In Experiment 1, the participants evaluated 24 syllogisms with conclusions that varied with respect to validity and consensuality. In Experiment 2, the participants produced conclusions to 64 pairs of premises. The correlation (...)
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  • Beware of samples! A cognitive-ecological sampling approach to judgment biases.Klaus Fiedler - 2000 - Psychological Review 107 (4):659-676.
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  • Emotional facial expressions differentially influence predictions and performance for face recognition.Jason S. Nomi, Matthew G. Rhodes & Anne M. Cleary - 2013 - Cognition and Emotion 27 (1):141-149.
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  • Divided attention at encoding: Effect on feeling-of-knowing.Mathilde Sacher, Laurence Taconnat, Céline Souchay & Michel Isingrini - 2009 - Consciousness and Cognition 18 (3):754-761.
    This research investigated the effect of divided attention at encoding on feeling-of-knowing . Participants had to learn a 60 word-pair list under two experimental conditions, one with full attention and one with divided attention . After that, they were administered episodic FOK tasks with a cued-recall phase, a FOK phase and a recognition phase. Our results showed that DA at encoding altered not only memory performance, but also FOK judgments and FOK accuracy. These findings throw some light on the central (...)
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  • The effect of time pressure on metacognitive control: developmental changes in self‑regulation and efficiency during learning.Gökhan Gönül, Nike Tsalas & Markus Paulus - forthcoming - Metacognition and Learning.
    The effect of time pressure on metacognitive control is of theoretical and empirical relevance and is likely to allow us to tap into developmental differences in performances which do not become apparent otherwise, as previous studies suggest. In the present study, we investigated the effect of time pressure on metacognitive control in three age groups (10-year-olds, 14-year-olds, and adults, n = 183). Using an established study time allocation paradigm, participants had to study two different sets of picture pairs, in an (...)
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  • The Sense of Effort: a Cost-Benefit Theory of the Phenomenology of Mental Effort.Marcell Székely & John Michael - 2020 - Review of Philosophy and Psychology 12 (4):889-904.
    In the current paper, we articulate a theory to explain the phenomenology of mental effort. The theory provides a working definition of mental effort, explains in what sense mental effort is a limited resource, and specifies the factors that determine whether or not mental effort is experienced as aversive. The core of our theory is the conjecture that the sense of effort is the output of a cost-benefit analysis. This cost-benefit analysis employs heuristics to weigh the current and anticipated costs (...)
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  • Differential Neural Correlates Underlie Judgment of Learning and Subsequent Memory Performance.Haiyan Yang, Ying Cai, Qi Liu, Xiao Zhao, Qiang Wang, Chuansheng Chen & Gui Xue - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  • Confidence in one’s social beliefs: Implications for belief justification.Asher Koriat & Shiri Adiv - 2012 - Consciousness and Cognition 21 (4):1599-1616.
    Philosophers commonly define knowledge as justified true beliefs. A heated debate exists, however, about what makes a belief justified. In this article, we examine the question of belief justification from a psychological perspective, focusing on the subjective confidence in a belief that the person has just formed. Participants decided whether to accept or reject a proposition depicting a social belief, and indicated their confidence in their choice. The task was repeated six times, and choice latency was measured. The results were (...)
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  • The disconnect between metamemory and memory for emotional images.Samira A. Dodson & Deanne L. Westerman - forthcoming - Cognition and Emotion.
    Knowledge of our own memory processes, whether driven by prior experiences or beliefs, is crucial in perceiving and interacting with our environment. This knowledge and awareness is metamemory, whi...
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  • Differential Effects of Valence and Encoding Strategy on Internal Source Memory and Judgments of Source: Exploring the Production and the Self-Reference Effect.Diana R. Pereira, Adriana Sampaio & Ana P. Pinheiro - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  • Distributed Learning in the Classroom: Effects of Rereading Schedules Depend on Time of Test.Carla E. Greving & Tobias Richter - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  • Two-stage dynamic signal detection: A theory of choice, decision time, and confidence.Timothy J. Pleskac & Jerome R. Busemeyer - 2010 - Psychological Review 117 (3):864-901.
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  • We know what stops you from thinking forever: A metacognitive perspective.Rakefet Ackerman & Kinga Morsanyi - 2023 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 46:e112.
    This commentary addresses omissions in De Neys's model of fast-and-slow thinking from a metacognitive perspective. We review well-established meta-reasoning monitoring (e.g., confidence) and control processes (e.g., rethinking) that explain mental effort regulation. Moreover, we point to individual, developmental, and task design considerations that affect this regulation. These core issues are completely ignored or mentioned in passing in the target article.
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  • How Does Prior Knowledge Influence Learning Engagement? The Mediating Roles of Cognitive Load and Help-Seeking.Anmei Dong, Morris Siu-Yung Jong & Ronnel B. King - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  • Happy but overconfident: positive affect leads to inaccurate metacomprehension.Anja Prinz, Viktoria Bergmann & Jörg Wittwer - 2018 - Cognition and Emotion 33 (3):606-615.
    ABSTRACTWhen learning from text, it is important that learners not only comprehend the information provided but also accurately monitor and judge their comprehension, which is known as metacomprehension accuracy. To investigate the role of a learner’s affective state for text comprehension and metacomprehension accuracy, we conducted an experiment with N = 103 university students in whom we induced positive, negative, or neutral affect. Positive affect resulted in poorer text comprehension than neutral affect. Positive affect also led to overconfident predictions, whereas (...)
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  • The self-consistency model of subjective confidence.Asher Koriat - 2012 - Psychological Review 119 (1):80-113.
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  • Evidence for Age-Equivalent and Task-Dissociative Metacognition in the Memory Domain.Alexandria C. Zakrzewski, Edie C. Sanders & Jane M. Berry - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Research suggests that metacognitive monitoring ability does not decline with age. For example, judgments-of-learning accuracy is roughly equivalent between younger and older adults. But few studies have asked whether younger and older adults’ metacognitive ability varies across different types of memory processes. The current study tested the relationship between memory and post-decision confidence ratings at the trial level on item and associative memory recognition tests. As predicted, younger and older adults had similarmetacognitive efficiency, when using meta-d’/d’, a measure derived from (...)
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  • Confounding in Studies on Metacognition: A Preliminary Causal Analysis Framework.Borysław Paulewicz, Marta Siedlecka & Marcin Koculak - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    By definition, metacognitive processes may monitor or regulate various stages of first-order processing. By combining causal analysis with hypotheses expressed by other authors we derive the theoretical and methodological consequences of this special relation between metacognition and the underlying processes. In particular, we prove that because multiple processing stages may be monitored or regulated and because metacognition may form latent feedback loops, 1) without strong additional causal assumptions, typical measures of metacognitive monitoring or regulation are confounded; 2) without strong additional (...)
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  • The Effect of Font Size on Children’s Memory and Metamemory.Vered Halamish, Hila Nachman & Tami Katzir - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9:383036.
    Recently, there has been a growing interest in the effect of perceptual features of learning materials on adults’ memory and metamemory. Previous studies consistently have found that adults use font size as a cue when monitoring their learning, judging that they will remember large font size words better than small font size words. Most studies have not demonstrated a significant effect of font size on adults’ memory, but a recent meta-analysis of these studies revealed a subtle memory advantage for large (...)
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  • Monitoring of learning for emotional faces: how do fine-grained categories of emotion influence participants’ judgments of learning and beliefs about memory?Amber E. Witherby & Sarah K. Tauber - 2017 - Cognition and Emotion 32 (4):860-866.
    Researchers have evaluated how broad categories of emotion influence judgments of learning relative to neutral items. Specifically, JOLs are typically higher for emotional relative to neutral items. The novel goal of the present research was to evaluate JOLs for fine-grained categories of emotion. Participants studied faces with afraid, angry, sad, or neutral expressions and with afraid, angry, or sad expressions. Participants identified the expressed emotion, made a JOL for each, and completed a recognition test. JOLs were higher for the emotional (...)
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  • Unskilled, underperforming, or unaware? Testing three accounts of individual differences in metacognitive monitoring.Jesse H. Grabman & Chad S. Dodson - 2024 - Cognition 242 (C):105659.
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  • Higher judgements of learning for emotional words: processing fluency or memory beliefs?Benton H. Pierce, Jason L. McCain, Amanda R. Stevens & David J. Frank - 2023 - Cognition and Emotion 37 (4):714-730.
    Previous research has shown that emotionally-valenced words are given higher judgements of learning (JOLs) than are neutral words. The current study examined potential explanations for this emotional salience effect on JOLs. Experiment 1 replicated the basic emotionality/JOL effect. In Experiments 2A and 2B, we used pre-study JOLs and assessed memory beliefs qualitatively, finding that, on average, participants believed that positive and negative words were more memorable than neutral words. Experiment 3 utilised a lexical decision task, resulting in lower reaction times (...)
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  • “You don't know what this means to me” – Uncovering idiosyncratic influences on metamemory judgments.Monika Undorf, Sofia Navarro-Báez & Arndt Bröder - 2022 - Cognition 222 (C):105011.
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  • Validity of attention self-reports in younger and older adults.Andra Arnicane, Klaus Oberauer & Alessandra S. Souza - 2021 - Cognition 206 (C):104482.
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  • Perceptual Fluency Affects Judgments of Learning Non-analytically and Analytically Through Beliefs About How Perceptual Fluency Affects Memory.Zhiwei Wang, Chunliang Yang, Wenbo Zhao & Yingjie Jiang - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  • Individual Differences in the Accuracy of Judgments of Learning Are Related to the Gray Matter Volume and Functional Connectivity of the Left Mid-Insula.Xiao Hu, Zhaomin Liu, Wen Chen, Jun Zheng, Ningxin Su, Wenjing Wang, Chongde Lin & Liang Luo - 2017 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 11.
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  • Performance Expectancies Moderate the Effectiveness of More or Less Generative Activities Over Time.Marc-André Reinhard, Sophia Christin Weissgerber & Kristin Wenzel - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  • A role for metamemory in cognitive offloading.Xiao Hu, Liang Luo & Stephen M. Fleming - 2019 - Cognition 193 (C):104012.
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  • The Effect of Word Frequency on Judgments of Learning: Contributions of Beliefs and Processing Fluency.Xiaoyu Jia, Ping Li, Xinyu Li, Yuchi Zhang, Wei Cao, Liren Cao & Weijian Li - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  • An analysis of the determinants of the feeling of knowing.Ayanna K. Thomas, John B. Bulevich & Stacey J. Dubois - 2012 - Consciousness and Cognition 21 (4):1681-1694.
    Research has demonstrated that feeling-of-knowing judgments are affected by the amount of accessible information related to an inaccessible target. Further, studies have demonstrated that, in some situations, FOK judgment magnitude is not only related to the amount of accessed features, but also the correctness of those features . The present study examined the conditions under which the correctness of features would influence FOK judgment magnitude. We hypothesized that accuracy of retrieved features would influence FOK judgments, but only in situations where (...)
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  • The difference between metacognition and mindreading: Evidence from functional near-infrared spectroscopy.Zhaolan Li, Wenwu Dai & Ning Jia - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    The relationship between metacognition and mindreading was investigated by examining how well one can monitor their own learning compared to another person’s learning. Here, we used functional near-infrared spectroscopy to systematically investigate the brain area activation during metacognition and mindreading. The evidence indicated that metacognition and mindreading are underpinned by distinct neural systems. Metacognition is associated with activation in brain regions important for memory retrieval, such as the fusiform gyrus, while mindreading is associated with activation in brain regions important for (...)
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  • Predicting Accuracy in Eyewitness Testimonies With Memory Retrieval Effort and Confidence.Philip U. Gustafsson, Torun Lindholm & Fredrik U. Jönsson - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  • Metacognition in working memory: Confidence judgments during an n-back task.Nadia Conte, Beth Fairfield, Caterina Padulo & Santiago Pelegrina - 2023 - Consciousness and Cognition 111 (C):103522.
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  • Dynamic overconfidence: a growth curve and cross lagged analysis of accuracy, confidence, overestimation and their relations.Edgar E. Kausel, Francisco Carrasco, Tomás Reyes, Alejandro Hirmas & Arturo Rodríguez - 2021 - Thinking and Reasoning 27 (3):417-444.
    1. Overconfidence is usually understood as being more confident than reality justifies (Harvey, 1997; Moore & Healy, 2008; Pompian, 2006), which leads individuals to overestimate their performance...
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