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c4pzj_v1 Computations of confidence are modulated by mentalizing ability Do people have privileged and direct access to their own minds, or do we infer our own thoughts and feelings indirectly, as we would infer the mental states of others? In this study we shed light on this question by examining how mentalizing ability—the set of processes involved in understanding other people’s thoughts and feelings—relates to metacognitive efficiency—the ability to reflect on one’s own performance. In a general population sample (N = 477) we showed that mentalizing ability and self-reported socio-communicative skills are positively correlated with perceptual metacognitive efficiency, even after controlling for choice accuracy. By modelling the trial-by-trial formation of confidence we showed that mentalizing ability predicted the association between response times and confidence, suggesting those with better mentalizing ability were more sensitive to inferential cues to self-performance. In a second study we showed that both mentalizing and metacognitive efficiency were lower in autistic participants (N = 40) when compared with age, gender, IQ, and education-matched non-autistic participants. Together, our results suggest that the ability to understand other people’s minds predicts self-directed metacognition. 2021-07-07T10:34:47.116096 2024-11-25T16:33:56.072611 2021-07-07T10:48:57.520837     psyarxiv 1 accepted 1 1 https://doi.org/10.31234/osf.io/c4pzj CC-By Attribution 4.0 International Metacognition; autism spectrum condition; mentalizing; perceptual decision-making ["Metacognition", "autism spectrum condition", "mentalizing", "perceptual decision-making"] Elisa van der Plas; David Mason; Lucy Anne Livingston; Jillian Craigie; Francesca Happé; Stephen Fleming [{"id": "yphvf", "name": "Elisa van der Plas", "index": 0, "orcid": "0000-0003-1662-518X", "bibliographic": true}, {"id": "bh2ad", "name": "David Mason", "index": 1, "orcid": "0000-0002-1382-4688", "bibliographic": true}, {"id": "d3gc5", "name": "Lucy Anne Livingston", "index": 2, "orcid": "0000-0002-8597-6525", "bibliographic": true}, {"id": "c9j7r", "name": "Jillian Craigie", "index": 3, "orcid": null, "bibliographic": true}, {"id": "gehw6", "name": "Francesca Happ\u00e9", "index": 4, "orcid": "0000-0001-9226-4000", "bibliographic": true}, {"id": "f96s2", "name": "Stephen Fleming", "index": 5, "orcid": "", "bibliographic": true}] Elisa van der Plas Neuroscience; Clinical Neuroscience [{"id": "5b4e7425c6983001430b6c1b", "text": "Neuroscience"}, {"id": "5b4e7426c6983001430b6c68", "text": "Clinical Neuroscience"}] https://osf.io/download/60e5834af80fdb00364e0147 0   available available ["https://osf.io/u6ecx/"] prereg_both 2025-04-09T20:04:06.925587
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