Coutinho Mariana V C, Thomas Justin, Alsuwaidi Alia S M, Couchman Justin J
Department of Psychology, College of Natural Health and Sciences, Zayed University, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates.
Department of Psychology, Albright College, Reading, PA, United States.
Front Psychol. 2021 Apr 8;12:603225. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.603225. eCollection 2021.
The Cognitive Reflection Test (CRT) is a measure of analytical reasoning that cues an intuitive but incorrect response that must be rejected for successful performance to be attained. The CRT yields two types of errors: Intuitive errors, which are attributed to Type 1 processes; and non-intuitive errors, which result from poor numeracy skills or deficient reasoning. Past research shows that participants who commit the highest numbers of errors on the CRT overestimate their performance the most, whereas those with the lowest error-rates tend to slightly underestimate. This is an example of the Dunning-Kruger Effect (DKE). The present study examined how intuitive vs. non-intuitive errors contribute to overestimation in the CRT at different levels of performance. Female undergraduate students completed a seven-item CRT test and subsequently estimated their raw score. They also filled out the Faith in Intuition (FI) questionnaire, which is a dispositional measure of intuitive thinking. Data was separated into quartiles based on level of performance on the CRT. The results demonstrated the DKE. Additionally, intuitive and non-intuitive errors predicted miscalibration among low, but not high performers. However, intuitive errors were a stronger predictor of miscalibration. Finally, FI was positively correlated with CRT self-estimates and miscalibration, indicating that participants who perceived themselves to be more intuitive were worse at estimating their score. These results taken together suggest that participants who perform poorly in the CRT and also those who score higher in intuitive thinking disposition are more susceptible to the influences of heuristic-based cues, such as answer fluency, when judging their performance.
认知反思测试(CRT)是一种分析推理能力的测量方法,它会引出一个直观但错误的答案,要想成功完成测试就必须拒绝这个答案。CRT会产生两种错误:直观错误,归因于1型思维过程;以及非直观错误,这是由于算术技能差或推理能力不足导致的。过去的研究表明,在CRT上犯错最多的参与者对自己表现的高估程度最大,而错误率最低的参与者往往会稍有低估。这是邓宁-克鲁格效应(DKE)的一个例子。本研究考察了在不同表现水平下,直观错误与非直观错误如何导致CRT中的高估现象。女性本科生完成了一项包含七个项目的CRT测试,随后估计了自己的原始分数。她们还填写了直觉信念(FI)问卷,这是一种对直觉思维的倾向性测量。根据在CRT上的表现水平,数据被分为四个四分位数。结果证明了邓宁-克鲁格效应。此外,直观错误和非直观错误在低表现者而非高表现者中预测了校准错误。然而,直观错误是校准错误的更强预测指标。最后,FI与CRT自我估计和校准错误呈正相关,这表明那些认为自己更具直觉性的参与者在估计分数方面表现更差。综合这些结果表明,在CRT中表现不佳的参与者以及在直觉思维倾向性方面得分较高的参与者,在判断自己的表现时更容易受到基于启发式线索(如答案流畅性)的影响。