Matthews Julian R, Sugihara Narumi, Nagisa Sofia, Ohashi Hiroki, Shibata Kazuhisa
RIKEN Center for Brain Science, Wakō‑shi, Saitama, Japan.
Commun Psychol. 2025 Sep 29;3(1):140. doi: 10.1038/s44271-025-00321-7.
Task decisions and confidence ratings are fundamental measures in metacognition research, but using these reports requires collecting them in some order. Only three orders exist and are used in an ad hoc manner across studies. Evidence suggests that when task decisions precede confidence, this report order can enhance metacognition. If verified, this effect pervades studies of metacognition and will lead the synthesis of this literature to invalid conclusions. In this Registered Report, we tested the effect of report order across popular domains of metacognition and probed two factors that may underlie why order effects have been observed in past studies: report time and motor preparation. We examined these effects in a perception experiment (n = 75) and memory experiment (n = 50), controlling task accuracy and learning. Our registered analyses found little effect of report order on metacognitive efficiency, even when timing and motor preparation were experimentally controlled. Our findings suggest the order of task decisions and confidence ratings has little effect on metacognition, and need not constrain secondary analysis or experimental design.
任务决策和信心评级是元认知研究中的基本测量指标,但使用这些报告需要按一定顺序收集。目前仅存在三种顺序,且在各项研究中以临时方式使用。有证据表明,当任务决策先于信心时,这种报告顺序能够增强元认知。如果这一结论得到验证,那么该效应将贯穿元认知研究,并会导致对这一文献的综合得出无效结论。在本预注册报告中,我们测试了报告顺序在元认知常见领域中的效应,并探究了过去研究中观察到顺序效应背后可能存在的两个因素:报告时间和动作准备。我们在一个知觉实验(n = 75)和一个记忆实验(n = 50)中考察了这些效应,同时控制任务准确性和学习情况。我们的预注册分析发现,即使在实验中对时间和动作准备进行了控制,报告顺序对元认知效率的影响也很小。我们的研究结果表明,任务决策和信心评级的顺序对元认知影响不大,无需限制二次分析或实验设计。