Fooling yourself can help you fool others into thinking you're not a fool.
Turns
out “fake it till you make it” is actually real.
A new study found that
over-confident students were more likely to be perceived as smart by
their peers, regardless of their actual grades.
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Researchers at Newcastle University and University of Exeter found that
students who over-estimated their own grades tended to be perceived as
more talented, and students who under-estimated their grades were seen
as less talented, regardless of their actual capabilities.
“Our results
support the idea that self-deception facilitates the deception of
others,” concluded Shakti Lamba and Vivek Nityananda in their study
published Wednesday in Plos One. “Overconfident individuals were overrated and underconfident individuals were underrated.”
Because the study was focused on students studying psychology and
anthropology, subjects that generally attract more female students, the
sample size was female-biased. But while Lamba and Nityananda
acknowledged that previous studies have found that men tend to be
over-confident and women tend to be under-confident, their research
found that gender had no effect on how people perceive self-assured men
and women.
The researchers also warned that over-confidence can have more of an
effect on individual decisions like picking a mate or hiring for jobs,
resulting in self-deceptive and risk-prone people being promoted to
powerful roles. “Promoting such individuals we may be creating
institutions such as banks, trading floors and armies, that are also
more vulnerable to risk,” they wrote.
In other words, even if you’ve made it, you’ll probably keep on faking it.
#Source:
Over-Confident People Are Seen as Smarter, Even When They’re Not
http://time.com/3197131/over-confidence-study/
Aug. 28, 2014
Aug. 28, 2014
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