I find it interesting that you both are underconfident and realize you are underconfident. Have you tried adjusting for underconfidence like you would any other cognitive bias? (At least you need not adjust for overconfidence!)
I don’t have much social confidence, but social confidence need not be related to credence calibration. I still end up giving somewhat overconfident answers on CFAR’s credence calibration game, despite being shy. My above comment could have been clearer: the bit about “my perception of the quality of certain things that I have written” has more to do with my self-worth, and less to do with my ability to judge the quality of my own writing.
I find it interesting that you both are underconfident and realize you are underconfident. Have you tried adjusting for underconfidence like you would any other cognitive bias? (At least you need not adjust for overconfidence!)
Someone thinking they are underconfident does not prove they are not overconfident.
I don’t have much social confidence, but social confidence need not be related to credence calibration. I still end up giving somewhat overconfident answers on CFAR’s credence calibration game, despite being shy. My above comment could have been clearer: the bit about “my perception of the quality of certain things that I have written” has more to do with my self-worth, and less to do with my ability to judge the quality of my own writing.
Oh, I think I see. Confidence is a feeling, while credence is a belief.