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Dunning-Kruger effect

Notes

the less you know, the more confident you are in your knowledge.

  1. Ignorance - at first we are unaware of the depth and the amount of knowledge that a given field contains - the "unknown unknowns", so we are not able to accurately evaluate how much we know, and we tend have over confidence in our knowledge/capabilities
  2. Cultured - in the second stage, although our knowledge increased, we are aware of the "known unknowns", thus reducing our confidence in this topic significantly. This can also generate the Imposter Syndrome because we allow our lack of knowledge reduce our confidence, even though we are more knowledgeable than the average person.
  3. Expert - only on stage three, our confidence matches our expertise once our knowledge has caught up with most available/relevant knowledge in this area. Notice that even in this stage there is a confidence gap from stage 1.

Only by forcing us to confront with our lack of knowledge we are able to admit it.

Visual

Dunning-kruger effect.webp

Overview

🔼Topic:: Cognitive Bias (MOC) Origin:: 🔗Link::

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