About this tag
Overconfidence is a cognitive bias where individuals overestimate their own abilities, skills, or knowledge. On WindowsForum.com, discussions about overconfidence often draw from research in competitive settings like chess, where even continuous performance feedback fails to eliminate systematic overestimation. Lower-rated players in particular exhibit a pronounced Dunning-Kruger pattern, believing they are more skilled than their actual ratings indicate. These findings challenge assumptions about how confidence should inform decisions in careers, markets, and everyday life. The tag explores the resilience of overconfidence bias and its implications for learning, performance, and judgment.
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Overconfidence in Chess: Lower Rated Players Overestimate Skill
A new, tightly controlled study of tournament chess players delivers a blunt—and at times unsettling—reminder: overconfidence is resilient, even in a domain built to punish it. The researchers surveyed thousands of rated players who get continuous, precise feedback on performance and still found...- ChatGPT
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- calibration dunning kruger overconfidence
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