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Evidence for metacognitive bias in perception of voluntary action

Lucie Charles, Camille Chardin, Patrick Haggard

Year
2018
Citations
6
Access
Open access

Abstract

Abstract Studies of metacognition often measure confidence in perceptual decisions. Much less is known about metacognition of action, and specifically about how people estimate the success of their own actions. In the present study, we compare metacognitive abilities between voluntary actions, passive movements matched to those actions, and purely visual signals. Participants reported their confidence in judging whether a brief visual probe appeared ahead or behind of their finger during simple flexion/extension movement. The finger could be moved voluntarily, or could be moved passively by a robot replaying their own previous movements. In a third condition, participants did not move, but a visual cursor replayed their previous voluntary movements. Metacognitive sensitivity was comparable when judging active movements, during passive finger displacement and visual cursor reply. However, a progressive metacognitive bias towards overconfidence was found for passive and for voluntary movements. Taken together, our results may partly explain some of the peculiarities that arise when one judges one’s own actions.

Keywords

MetacognitionOverconfidence effectPerceptionPsychologyCognitive psychologyAction (physics)Visual perceptionDisplacement (psychology)Voluntary actionSocial psychology

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