Metacognition in argument generation: the misperceived relationship between emotional investment and argument quality |
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Authors: | Dan R. Johnson Mara E. Tynan Andy S. Cuthbert Juliette K. O’Quinn |
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Affiliation: | Psychology Department, Washington and Lee University, Lexington, VA United States |
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Abstract: | Overestimation of one’s ability to argue their position on socio-political issues may partially underlie the current climate of political extremism in the U.S. Yet very little is known about what factors influence overestimation in argumentation of socio-political issues. Across three experiments, emotional investment substantially increased participants’ overestimation. Potential confounding factors like topic complexity and familiarity were ruled out as alternative explanations (Experiments 1–3). Belief-based cues were established as a mechanism underlying the relationship between emotional investment and overestimation in a measurement-of-mediation (Experiment 2) and manipulation-of-mediator (Experiment 3) design. Representing a new bias blind spot, participants believed emotional investment helps them argue better than it helps others (Experiments 2 and 3); where in reality emotional investment harmed or had no effect on argument quality. These studies highlight misguided beliefs about emotional investment as a factor underlying metacognitive miscalibration in the context of socio-political issues. |
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Keywords: | Argument quality metacognition emotional investment socio-political issues bias blind spot |
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