But I Was So Sure! Metacognitive Judgments Are Less Accurate Given Prospectively than Retrospectively

Prospective and retrospective metacognitive judgments have been studied extensively in the field of memory; however, their accuracy has not been systematically compared. Such a comparison is important for studying how metacognitive judgments are formed. Here, we present the results of an experiment aiming to investigate the relation between performance in an anagram task and the accuracy of prospective and retrospective confidence judgments. Participants worked on anagrams and were then asked to respond whether a presented word was the solution. They also rated their confidence, either before or after the response and either before or after seeing the suggested solution. The results showed that although response accuracy always correlated with confidence, this relationship was weaker when metacognitive judgements were given before the response. We discuss the theoretical and methodological implications of this finding for studies on metacognition and consciousness.

[1]  H. Müller,et al.  Metacognitive sensitivity of subjective reports of decisional confidence and visual experience , 2015, Consciousness and Cognition.

[2]  Lucas C. Parra,et al.  Neural Correlates of Perceived Confidence in a Partial Report Paradigm , 2015, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[3]  Axel Cleeremans,et al.  How can we measure awareness? An overview of current methods , 2015 .

[4]  Elisabeth Norman,et al.  Measuring consciousness with confidence ratings , 2015 .

[5]  Nick Yeung,et al.  Shared Neural Markers of Decision Confidence and Error Detection , 2015, The Journal of Neuroscience.

[6]  David Soto,et al.  On the independence of visual awareness and metacognition: a signal detection theoretic analysis. , 2015, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[7]  Tony Ro,et al.  Action-Specific Disruption of Perceptual Confidence , 2015, Psychological science.

[8]  M. Shadlen,et al.  Choice Certainty Is Informed by Both Evidence and Decision Time , 2014, Neuron.

[9]  Anil K. Seth,et al.  Blind Insight: Metacognitive Discrimination Despite Chance Task Performance , 2014, Psychological science.

[10]  Otto W. Witte,et al.  You’d Better Think Twice: Post-Decision Perceptual Confidence , 2014, NeuroImage.

[11]  Axel Cleeremans,et al.  Different subjective awareness measures demonstrate the influence of visual identification on perceptual awareness ratings , 2014, Consciousness and Cognition.

[12]  D. Bates,et al.  Fitting Linear Mixed-Effects Models Using lme4 , 2014, 1406.5823.

[13]  Marc Brysbaert,et al.  Subtlex-pl: subtitle-based word frequency estimates for Polish , 2014, Behavior Research Methods.

[14]  David W. Franklin,et al.  Motor Effort Alters Changes of Mind in Sensorimotor Decision Making , 2014, PloS one.

[15]  Michael Zehetleitner,et al.  Being confident without seeing: What subjective measures of visual consciousness are about , 2013, Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics.

[16]  Zoltan Dienes,et al.  The speed of metacognition: Taking time to get to know one’s structural knowledge , 2013, Consciousness and Cognition.

[17]  Axel Cleeremans,et al.  Subjective measures of consciousness in artificial grammar learning task , 2012, Consciousness and Cognition.

[18]  Marco Steinhauser,et al.  Error awareness as evidence accumulation: effects of speed-accuracy trade-off on error signaling , 2012, Front. Hum. Neurosci..

[19]  R. Dolan,et al.  The neural basis of metacognitive ability , 2012, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.

[20]  Christopher Summerfield,et al.  Metacognition in human decision-making: confidence and error monitoring , 2012, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.

[21]  Elisabeth Norman,et al.  Measuring strategic control in artificial grammar learning , 2011, Consciousness and Cognition.

[22]  Markus Ullsperger,et al.  Error Awareness Revisited: Accumulation of Multimodal Evidence from Central and Autonomic Nervous Systems , 2011, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[23]  H. Lau,et al.  Empirical support for higher-order theories of conscious awareness , 2011, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[24]  Axel Cleeremans,et al.  Measuring consciousness: Is one measure better than the other? , 2010, Consciousness and Cognition.

[25]  Timothy J. Pleskac,et al.  Two-stage dynamic signal detection: a theory of choice, decision time, and confidence. , 2010, Psychological review.

[26]  R. Passingham,et al.  Theta-burst transcranial magnetic stimulation to the prefrontal cortex impairs metacognitive visual awareness , 2010, Cognitive neuroscience.

[27]  S. Dehaene,et al.  Causal role of prefrontal cortex in the threshold for access to consciousness. , 2009, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[28]  D. Wolpert,et al.  Changing your mind: a computational mechanism of vacillation , 2009, Nature.

[29]  Janet Metcalfe,et al.  Effective Implementation of Metacognition , 2009 .

[30]  Z. Dienes,et al.  The conscious, the unconscious, and familiarity. , 2008, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[31]  Elisabeth J. Ploran,et al.  Evidence Accumulation and the Moment of Recognition: Dissociating Perceptual Recognition Processes Using fMRI , 2007, The Journal of Neuroscience.

[32]  S. Dehaene,et al.  Brain Dynamics Underlying the Nonlinear Threshold for Access to Consciousness , 2007, PLoS biology.

[33]  S. Rapcsak,et al.  Metamemory for faces following frontal lobe damage , 2005, Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society.

[34]  Katherine A. Rawson,et al.  Second-Order Judgments About Judgments of Learning , 2005 .

[35]  T. O. Nelson,et al.  Using the past to predict the future , 2005, Memory & cognition.

[36]  Asher Koriat,et al.  The effects of encoding fluency and retrieval fluency on judgments of learning , 2005 .

[37]  M. Alexander,et al.  A role for right medial prefrontal cortex in accurate feeling-of-knowing judgments: evidence from patients with lesions to frontal cortex , 2004, Neuropsychologia.

[38]  Mildred M Maldonado-Molina,et al.  Response reversals in recognition memory. , 2004, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[39]  William M Petrusic,et al.  Judging confidence influences decision processing in comparative judgments , 2003, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[40]  J. Dunlosky,et al.  Fluency of retrieval at study affects judgments of learning (JOLs): An analytic or nonanalytic basis for JOLs? , 2001, Memory & cognition.

[41]  J. Metcalfe Feelings and Judgments of Knowing: Is There a Special Noetic State? , 2000, Consciousness and Cognition.

[42]  A. Koriat,et al.  Conscious and Unconscious Metacognition: A Rejoinder , 2000, Consciousness and Cognition.

[43]  Geoffrey R. Loftus,et al.  Accounts of the confidence-accuracy relation in recognition memory , 2000, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[44]  M. Coles,et al.  Performance monitoring in a confusing world: error-related brain activity, judgments of response accuracy, and types of errors. , 2000, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[45]  Douglas Vickers,et al.  Dynamic Models of Simple Judgments: I. Properties of a Self-Regulating Accumulator Module , 1998 .

[46]  Z. Dienes,et al.  UNCONSCIOUS KNOWLEDGE OF ARTIFICIAL GRAMMARS IS APPLIED STRATEGICALLY , 1995 .

[47]  J. Metcalfe,et al.  The cue-familiarity heuristic in metacognition. , 1993, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[48]  D. S. Lindsay,et al.  Remembering Mistaken for Knowing: Ease of Retrieval as a Basis for Confidence in Answers to General Knowledge Questions , 1993 .

[49]  J. Hart,et al.  Memory and the feeling-of-knowing experience. , 1965, Journal of educational psychology.

[50]  C. Warden,et al.  A study of individual differences in motion acuity at scotopic levels of illumination , 1945 .

[51]  R Core Team,et al.  R: A language and environment for statistical computing. , 2014 .

[52]  Lisa K. Son,et al.  Anoetic, noetic, and autonoetic metacognition , 2012 .

[53]  A. Ellison You’d better think , 2012 .

[54]  Axel Cleeremans,et al.  Cleeremans unconscious redescription process Higher order thoughts in action : consciousness as an Supplementary data , 2012 .

[55]  D. Schacter,et al.  a comparison of feeling-of-knowing and retrospective confidence judgments , 2009 .

[56]  R. Ratcliff,et al.  Modeling confidence and response time in recognition memory. , 2009, Psychological review.

[57]  Davide Bruno,et al.  Investigating strength and frequency effects in recognition memory using type-2 signal detection theory. , 2009, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[58]  J. Wade,et al.  Changes of mind , 1996 .