PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

Unrealistic comparative optimism: An unsuccessful search for evidence of a genuinely motivational bias.

  • Adam J L Harris,
  • Laura de Molière,
  • Melinda Soh,
  • Ulrike Hahn

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0173136
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 3
p. e0173136

Abstract

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One of the most accepted findings across psychology is that people are unrealistically optimistic in their judgments of comparative risk concerning future life events-they judge negative events as less likely to happen to themselves than to the average person. Harris and Hahn (2011), however, demonstrated how unbiased (non-optimistic) responses can result in data patterns commonly interpreted as indicative of optimism due to statistical artifacts. In the current paper, we report the results of 5 studies that control for these statistical confounds and observe no evidence for residual unrealistic optimism, even observing a 'severity effect' whereby severe outcomes were overestimated relative to neutral ones (Studies 3 & 4). We conclude that there is no evidence supporting an optimism interpretation of previous results using the prevalent comparison method.