Litcius/Paper detail

Who knows what? Knowledge misattribution in the division of cognitive labor.

Matthew Fisher, Daniel M. Oppenheimer

2021Journal of Experimental Psychology Applied30 citationsDOI

Abstract

= 3,262) extend previous research by exploring how illusions of knowledge result from reliance on other agents. After teaming with knowledgeable partners (artificially intelligent agents or human teammates) on a trivia quiz, people overestimated how well they would perform on future quizzes for which help was not available; this bias was not evident for participants who never received help. Moreover, overconfidence was insensitive to whether assistance was provided on hard versus easy problems, or even whether the assistance was accurate. Receiving outside assistance creates an ambiguity regarding who deserves credit for success or blame for failure. When this ambiguity is removed, people become better calibrated. These results indicate that reliance on technology and outside knowledge may change our view of ourselves-convincing us we are more capable than we really are. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).

Topics & Concepts

Misattribution of memoryBlameAmbiguityOverconfidence effectCompetence (human resources)PsychologyPsycINFOCognitionIllusionSocial psychologyInternet privacyCognitive psychologyComputer sciencePolitical scienceMEDLINELawProgramming languageNeuroscienceAI in Service InteractionsEthics and Social Impacts of AI
Who knows what? Knowledge misattribution in the division of cognitive labor. | Litcius