PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

When feeling skillful impairs coordination in a lottery selection task.

  • Anna Dorfman,
  • Yoella Bereby-Meyer,
  • Simone Moran

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0065092
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 6
p. e65092

Abstract

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Choosing a major field of study to secure a good job after graduation is a tacit coordination problem that requires considering others' choices. We examine how feeling skillful, either induced (Experiment 1) or measured (Experiment 2), affects coordination in this type of task. In both experiments participants chose between two lotteries, one offering a larger prize than the other. Participants' entry into the chosen lottery was either related or unrelated to their skill, with the final prize allocated randomly to one of the entrants in each lottery. Importantly, across conditions skill was irrelevant to choosing between lotteries. Notwithstanding, when skill was related to determining lottery entrants, participants who felt highly skillful chose the high prize lottery excessively. Results further suggest that this stems from high confidence in self skill, rather than incorrect expectations regarding others.