Confidence Judgment: Does Your Brain Really Do It in Two Parts?
Thu Nov 14 2024
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Ever wondered how you know if you got an answer right? This feeling of confidence is called judgment of confidence (JOC). Initially, scientists thought this process happened in one go, after you try to remember something. But new research says it might be more complicated. Your brain could be splitting this process into two stages: fetching the answer and then checking how confident you are about it.
This study wants to dig deeper into how these stages work in your brain and when they happen. Scientists are tracking how your brain works using something called an event-related potential (ERP). They found that it might be like having a check-in meeting after a brainstorm session. First, your brain comes up with an answer. Then, it evaluates how good it thinks that answer is. Pretty neat, huh?
Thinking about how our brains work can be mind-boggling. It's like our brain has its own little office, with different departments doing different jobs to help us make sense of the world. It's not just a single boss barking orders. There's a whole team working together to make sure we're confident in what we think we know.
https://localnews.ai/article/confidence-judgment-does-your-brain-really-do-it-in-two-parts-c7e4ac29
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