PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

The effect of self-efficacy on visual discrimination sensitivity.

  • George Zacharopoulos,
  • Nicola Binetti,
  • Vincent Walsh,
  • Ryota Kanai

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0109392
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 10
p. e109392

Abstract

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Can subjective belief about one's own perceptual competence change one's perception? To address this question, we investigated the influence of self-efficacy on sensory discrimination in two low-level visual tasks: contrast and orientation discrimination. We utilised a pre-post manipulation approach whereby two experimental groups (high and low self-efficacy) and a control group made objective perceptual judgments on the contrast or the orientation of the visual stimuli. High and low self-efficacy were induced by the provision of fake social-comparative performance feedback and fictional research findings. Subsequently, the post-manipulation phase was performed to assess changes in visual discrimination thresholds as a function of the self-efficacy manipulations. The results showed that the high self-efficacy group demonstrated greater improvement in visual discrimination sensitivity compared to both the low self-efficacy and control groups. These findings suggest that subjective beliefs about one's own perceptual competence can affect low-level visual processing.