Department of Cognitive Sciences, University of California, Irvine, CA, USA.
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA, USA.
Psychon Bull Rev. 2024 Aug;31(4):1627-1637. doi: 10.3758/s13423-023-02433-9. Epub 2024 Jan 4.
How accurate are people in judging someone else's knowledge based on their language use, and do more knowledgeable people use different cues to make these judgments? We address this by recruiting a group of participants ("informants") to answer general knowledge questions and describe various images belonging to different categories (e.g., cartoons, basketball). A second group of participants ("evaluators") also answer general knowledge questions and decide who is more knowledgeable within pairs of informants, based on these descriptions. Evaluators perform above chance at identifying the most knowledgeable informants (65% with only one description available). The less knowledgeable evaluators base their decisions on the number of specific statements, regardless of whether the statements are true or false. The more knowledgeable evaluators treat true and false statements differently and penalize the knowledge they attribute to informants who produce specific yet false statements. Our findings demonstrate the power of a few words when assessing others' knowledge and have implications for how misinformation is processed differently between experts and novices.
人们根据语言使用来判断他人知识的准确性如何?知识更丰富的人是否会使用不同的线索来做出这些判断?我们通过招募一群参与者(“知情者”)来回答一般知识问题并描述属于不同类别的各种图像(例如卡通、篮球)来解决这个问题。第二组参与者(“评估者”)也回答一般知识问题,并根据这些描述在知情者对之间做出谁更有知识的决定。评估者在仅通过一种描述的情况下,识别最有知识的知情者的准确率超过了随机水平(65%)。知识水平较低的评估者根据具体陈述的数量做出决策,而不考虑陈述是对是错。知识水平较高的评估者对真实和错误的陈述有不同的处理方式,并对他们归因于提供具体但错误陈述的知情者的知识进行惩罚。我们的研究结果表明,在评估他人的知识时,几个字就有很大的影响力,并且对专家和新手之间如何不同地处理错误信息有影响。