Egocentric bias in effort comparison tasks Is driven by sensory asymmetries, not attribution bias
Egocentric bias in effort comparison tasks Is driven by sensory asymmetries, not attribution bias
When comparing themselves with others, people often perceive their own actions and behaviour favourably. This phenomenon is often categorised as a bias of attribution, with favourable self-evaluation resulting from differing explanations of one’s own behaviour and that of others. However, studies on availability biases offer an alternative explanation, ascribing egocentric biases to the inherent sensory asymmetries between performing an action and merely observing it. In this study, we used a paradigm that allowed us to directly compare these two distinct sources of bias. Participants perceived the tasks they performed to be harder than the tasks they observed, but demonstrated no bias driven by favourable self-evaluation. Furthermore, the degree of overestimation of the difficulty of performed tasks was magnified as overall task difficulty increased. These findings suggest that egocentric biases are in part derived from sensory asymmetries inherent to the first-person perspective.
Stinson, Caedyn
37a2e5d3-1b61-4901-8bc5-00bde89dc145
Kagan, Igor
fb5e2738-859b-47a6-ae5c-67db33330681
Pooresmaeili, Arezoo
319b6aed-8454-4ad2-b16e-8fadfdfd2e53
15 August 2022
Stinson, Caedyn
37a2e5d3-1b61-4901-8bc5-00bde89dc145
Kagan, Igor
fb5e2738-859b-47a6-ae5c-67db33330681
Pooresmaeili, Arezoo
319b6aed-8454-4ad2-b16e-8fadfdfd2e53
[Unknown type: UNSPECIFIED]
Abstract
When comparing themselves with others, people often perceive their own actions and behaviour favourably. This phenomenon is often categorised as a bias of attribution, with favourable self-evaluation resulting from differing explanations of one’s own behaviour and that of others. However, studies on availability biases offer an alternative explanation, ascribing egocentric biases to the inherent sensory asymmetries between performing an action and merely observing it. In this study, we used a paradigm that allowed us to directly compare these two distinct sources of bias. Participants perceived the tasks they performed to be harder than the tasks they observed, but demonstrated no bias driven by favourable self-evaluation. Furthermore, the degree of overestimation of the difficulty of performed tasks was magnified as overall task difficulty increased. These findings suggest that egocentric biases are in part derived from sensory asymmetries inherent to the first-person perspective.
UNSPECIFIED
2022.08.12.503607v1.full
- Author's Original
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Published date: 15 August 2022
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Local EPrints ID: 481584
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/481584
PURE UUID: 21191a12-7d06-47f7-a465-4627152afae8
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Date deposited: 04 Sep 2023 16:43
Last modified: 01 Oct 2024 02:09
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Author:
Caedyn Stinson
Author:
Igor Kagan
Author:
Arezoo Pooresmaeili
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