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Individual differences and multi-step thinking.

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Understanding decision-making in thinking processes is key. People may prematurely trust their intuition or favored ideas, leading to quick, unjustified confidence during complex thought.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Decision Science

Background:

  • Deliberative thinking involves sequential steps with critical switch decisions.
  • Confidence in ongoing thought processes influences these decisions.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To explore how confidence levels affect switch decisions in deliberative thinking.
  • To investigate individual differences in confidence tolerance and their impact on decision-making.

Main Methods:

  • Analysis of cognitive processes during multi-step thinking tasks.
  • Examination of factors influencing confidence judgments and their relation to decision outcomes.

Main Results:

  • Confidence in prior thinking significantly impacts subsequent switch decisions.
  • Individuals exhibit varying tolerances for low confidence, affecting decision timing.
  • Premature high confidence can arise from intuition reliance or conclusion bolstering.

Conclusions:

  • Confidence monitoring is crucial in understanding rational decision-making.
  • Individual differences in confidence processing contribute to cognitive biases.
  • Further research should explore interventions to improve confidence calibration in thinking.