Overconfidence can lead to poor decision making, Neuroscientists reveal
The link between overconfidence and poor
decision making is under the spotlight in an international study by
scientists from Monash University and the Max Planck Institute for Human
Cognitive and Brain Sciences in Leipzig.
People vary
widely in their awareness of what they do and don't know, or
metacognitive ability, and in general are too confident when evaluating
their performance. This often leads to poor decision making with potentially disastrous consequences, according to the report's authors.
The team has published a study in the journal Social, Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience which provides some insight into how overconfidence can lead to poor decision making.
The authors include an international group of scientists at the
Department of Social Neuroscience at the Max Planck Institute, headed by
Professor Tania Singer, in collaboration with Dr Pascal Molenberghs
from the Monash Institute of Cognitive and Clinical Neurosciences and
Fynn-Mathis Trautwein, Dr. Anne Böckler and Dr. Philipp Kanske from the
Max Planck institute team.
They analysed data from the ReSource Project, which is a unique,
large scale study on Eastern and Western methods of mental training
performed at the Max Planck Institute. In the context of a social
cognition task performed in the brain scanner, the volunteers watched a
video of a person telling a story and then had to answer a difficult
question about what the person said.
Subsequently, people indicated how confident they felt their response
was correct. The researchers then measured how good people were in
evaluating their own accuracy; a process called metacognition.
"The more confident people were about their performance, the higher
the activation in brain areas such as the striatum, an area often
associated with reward processing," first author Dr Molenberghs said.
"However, too much confidence was associated with lower metacognitive ability," co-first author Mr Trautwein added.
When combined, the results indicate that although being confident
entails a reward-like component, it can lead to overconfidence which in
turn can undermine decision making.
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