How do risk attitudes affect measured confidence?

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Abstract

We examine the relationship between confidence in own absolute performance and risk attitudes using two confidence elicitation procedures: self-reported (non-incentivised) confidence and an incentivised procedure that elicits the certainty equivalent of a bet based on performance. The former procedure reproduces the “hard-easy effect” (underconfidence in easy tasks and overconfidence in hard tasks) found in a large number of studies using non-incentivised self-reports. The latter procedure produces general underconfidence, which is significantly reduced, but not eliminated when we filter out the effects of risk attitudes. Finally, we find that self-reported confidence correlates significantly with features of individual risk attitudes including parameters of individual probability weighting.

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Murad, Z., Sefton, M., & Starmer, C. (2016). How do risk attitudes affect measured confidence? Journal of Risk and Uncertainty, 52(1), 21–46. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11166-016-9231-1

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