Y11W03VC Confidence and competence on different roads
You've probably come across the idea, maybe as a meme. The person who is bad at something doesn't know it. The person who is good at it doesn't know that either. Confidence is inversely correlated with competence. The idea is called the Dunning-Kruger effect. This week's article looks at what the original research actually found — which is more interesting, and much less convenient, than the version that went viral.
Core Vocabulary
inversely
/ɪnˈvɜːsli/|in·verse·ly
adverb
In a way that is opposite in direction or relation; as one quantity increases, another decreases in a corresponding manner.
Word Breakdown: From Latin "inversus" (turned upside down) + -ly (adverbial suffix). In- (not) + versus (turned).
Word family: inverse (adj/n), inversely (adv), inversion (n), invert (v)
Synonyms: oppositely, conversely, in reverse proportion, reciprocally
Collocations: inversely proportional, inversely related, inversely correlated, inversely affects
Example: Test anxiety is inversely related to exam performance; as one increases, the other typically decreases.
rendered
/ˈrendəd/|ren·dered
verb (past tense)
Expressed, depicted, or presented in a particular form, style, or medium.
Word Breakdown: From Old French "rendre" (to give back, deliver), from Latin "reddere" (to return).
Word family: render (v), rendered (adj), rendering (n), renderer (n)
Synonyms: depicted, presented, expressed, portrayed, translated
Collocations: rendered invalid, rendered helpless, rendered as, rendered in, rendered obsolete
Example: The Dunning-Kruger effect is rendered visible through the inverted U-shaped curve in competence ratings.
asymmetric
/ˌeɪsɪˈmetrɪk/|a·sym·met·ric
adjective
Lacking symmetry; having unequal or unbalanced sides, parts, or relationships.
Word Breakdown: From Greek "a-" (without) + "symmetria" (symmetry, proportion). Prefix a- means "not".
Word family: asymmetry (n), asymmetrical (adj), asymmetrically (adv), symmetry (n), symmetric (adj)
Synonyms: unbalanced, lopsided, unequal, imbalanced, one-sided
Collocations: asymmetric relationship, asymmetric information, asymmetric distribution, asymmetric warfare
Example: The Dunning-Kruger effect demonstrates an asymmetric pattern: the competence-confidence gap is much larger at low skill levels.
calibrate
/ˈkælɪbreɪt/|cal·i·brate
verb
To adjust, set, or check an instrument or person's judgment to ensure accuracy; to align perception with reality.
Word Breakdown: From French "calibre" (diameter of a gun barrel), used metaphorically for precision and accuracy.
Word family: calibrate (v), calibrated (adj), calibration (n), calibrator (n), uncalibrated (adj)
Synonyms: adjust, fine-tune, align, attune, regulate
Collocations: calibrate accuracy, calibrate confidence, calibrated judgment, well-calibrated, poorly calibrated
Example: Teachers must calibrate their assessment of student abilities regularly to avoid bias and ensure fair evaluation.
artefact
/ˈɑːtɪfækt/|ar·te·fact
noun
An object made or shaped by human craft; a spurious finding in research caused by the method rather than the true effect.
Word Breakdown: From Latin "arte" (by skill) + "factum" (made). Art- means "skill" and -fact means "made".
Word family: artifact (variant spelling), artefactual (adj), artificial (adj), artificer (n)
Synonyms: object, relic, remnant, product, by-product
Collocations: archaeological artefact, research artefact, cultural artefact, methodological artefact
Example: Some early Dunning-Kruger replications suffered from research artefacts; careful experimental design was needed to confirm the genuine effect.
corollary
/ˈkɒrəleri/ or /kəˈrɒləri/|cor·ol·lar·y
noun
A conclusion that follows naturally from another statement or fact already established; a logical consequence.
Word Breakdown: From Latin "corollarium" (small gift, tip). In mathematics, it denotes something that follows naturally from a theorem.
Word family: corollary (n), corollaries (plural), correlate (v), correlation (n)
Synonyms: consequence, inference, deduction, implication, follow-on
Collocations: logical corollary, natural corollary, corollary of, direct corollary
Example: A corollary of metacognitive awareness is that experts often underestimate how much domain knowledge they actually possess.
filtered
/ˈfɪltəd/|fil·tered
adjective/verb (past)
Passed through a filter to remove unwanted elements; processed to select only certain information.
Word Breakdown: From Old French "filtrer", likely from Medieval Latin "filtrum" (felt used as a filter).
Word family: filter (n/v), filtered (adj), filtering (n), filtration (n), unfiltered (adj)
Synonyms: screened, sieved, strained, purified, selected
Collocations: filtered information, filtered results, filtered feedback, filtered perception, filtered data
Example: Novices often have filtered feedback from their performance; they notice successes but dismiss failures as bad luck rather than lack of skill.
paralysed
/ˈpærəlaɪzd/|par·a·lysed
adjective/verb (past)
Unable to move or act; rendered powerless or incapable of functioning (British spelling).
Word Breakdown: From Greek "para-" (beside, beyond) + "lysis" (loosening, dissolution). Related to Greek "paraluesthai" (to disable).
Word family: paralyse (v), paralysed (adj), paralysis (n), paralyzing (adj), unparalysed (adj)
Synonyms: immobilized, disabled, incapacitated, frozen, helpless
Collocations: paralysed by fear, partially paralysed, emotionally paralysed, decision paralysed
Example: Experts may be paralysed by awareness of their knowledge gaps; they recognise so much that they doubt their competence.
Technical Terms
Dunning-Kruger effect
/ˈdʌnɪŋ ˈkruːɡər ɪˈfɛkt/|Dun·ning-Kru·ger ef·fect
noun phrase
the tendency for low-skill individuals to overrate and high-skill individuals to underrate their own performance
Synonyms: illusory superiority, competence blindness, metacognitive failure
Collocations: exhibit the Dunning-Kruger effect, Dunning-Kruger effect in beginners, Dunning-Kruger phenomenon
Example: New drivers who feel fully competent after just a few lessons may be experiencing the Dunning-Kruger effect — their limited experience prevents them from recognising how much they do not yet know.
regression to the mean
/rɪˈɡrɛʃ(ə)n tə ðə miːn/|re·gres·sion to the mean
noun phrase
statistical tendency for extreme values to be followed by values closer to the average
Synonyms: statistical reversion, mean reversion, regression effect
Collocations: regression to the mean predicts, account for regression to the mean, ignore regression to the mean
Example: A student who scored unusually high on one test and then returned to their normal score on the next may have experienced regression to the mean, not a genuine decline in ability.
above-average effect
/əˌbʌv ˈævərɪdʒ ɪˈfɛkt/|a·bove-av·er·age ef·fect
noun phrase
tendency for most people to rate themselves as better than average
Synonyms: illusory superiority, better-than-average effect, self-enhancement bias
Collocations: demonstrate the above-average effect, above-average effect in self-assessment, above-average illusion
Example: When surveyed, the majority of drivers rated themselves above average in skill — a statistical impossibility that neatly demonstrates the above-average effect.
meta-cognitive knowledge
/ˌmetə kɒɡnɪtɪv ˈnɒlɪdʒ/|me·ta-cog·ni·tive knowl·edge
noun phrase
Knowledge about one's own thinking — knowing what you know, what you do not know and how accurately you can judge your own performance.
Word Breakdown: meta- (about or beyond) + cognitive (relating to thinking) + knowledge
Word family: metacognition (n.), metacognitive (adj.), cognition (n.)
Synonyms: self-knowledge, metacognition, awareness of thinking
Collocations: lack meta-cognitive knowledge, develop meta-cognitive knowledge, accurate meta-cognitive judgement
Example: A student with strong meta-cognitive knowledge can tell when they genuinely understand a concept and when they are only familiar with it.
Figurative Phrases
take away
to draw a lesson or conclusion
Etymology/Type: non-literal, nothing is physically taken
Synonyms: draw a lesson from, come away with, extract a conclusion
Example: The key thing to take away from this research is not that overconfidence is universal, but that it is most acute precisely where accurate feedback is least available.
punchy narrative
a concise, forceful story
Etymology/Type: figurative use of 'punchy', suggesting impact
Synonyms: crisp story, striking account, compressed narrative
Example: The research was nuanced and full of qualifications, but the journalist distilled it into a punchy narrative that could be shared — and misunderstood — in a single line.
running blind
acting without needed information
Etymology/Type: metaphorical, not literal blindness
Synonyms: operating in the dark, flying blind, acting without information
Example: Without reliable feedback on how others perceived her performance, she was effectively running blind — unable to calibrate what she needed to change or improve.
a mixed signal
ambiguous information
Etymology/Type: figurative, not literal signalling
Synonyms: contradictory message, ambiguous sign, confusing indicator
Example: His encouraging words delivered in a flat, disengaged tone sent a mixed signal that left his students uncertain whether their work was genuinely progressing.
flipped a real finding
reversed or inverted
Etymology/Type: figurative use of 'flipped'
Synonyms: reversed an actual result, inverted a genuine insight, distorted a real discovery
Example: The popular claim that we only use ten percent of our brains has flipped a real finding about neural efficiency into a persistent and misleading myth.
goes viral
spreads quickly through culture
Etymology/Type: metaphor from disease transmission
Confusing Words
inversely vs conversely
Both words signal a kind of opposition, but they describe very different types — one mathematical and proportional, the other logical and propositional.
- inversely — in a proportional relationship where one variable increases as another decreases, or vice versa. Confidence and competence are inversely related in early learning: the less you know, the more confident you may feel. The word belongs to the language of measurement and quantity.
- conversely — from the other direction; restating the same relationship by reversing its terms. Where inversely describes a quantitative correlation, conversely connects two statements: "A implies B; conversely, B implies A." It signals a logical reversal, not a mathematical one.
If describing a proportional relationship between two variables moving in opposite directions, use inversely. If reversing a logical claim or proposition, use conversely.
artefact vs artifact
This is a spelling variant rather than a meaning distinction — both words refer to the same thing, and choosing between them is a matter of convention, not definition.
- artefact — the preferred British and Australian English spelling. In academic contexts, artefact refers to a physical object made or modified by humans, or to a result produced by the research method rather than by the phenomenon under study — a distortion introduced by measurement.
- artifact — the preferred American English spelling, used interchangeably with artefact in all senses. In scientific writing, an artifact in data is equally a distortion introduced by the analysis rather than reflecting genuine variation in the subject.
Use artefact for British or Australian audiences; use artifact for American audiences. The meaning is identical in both cases.
corollary vs consequence
Both words describe something that follows from something else, but the type of following is different — one inferential, the other causal.
- corollary — a logical follow-on that can be deduced from an established principle without additional evidence. If the Dunning-Kruger effect is real, a corollary is that those who know the least are also least equipped to recognise their own ignorance. The connection is one of reasoning.
- consequence — an actual result or outcome; something that happens as a direct effect of something else. A consequence of the Dunning-Kruger effect might be that overconfident performers receive less useful corrective feedback because they project confidence. The connection is one of causation.
If the relationship is one of logical inference from a principle, use corollary. If the relationship is causal — something that actually happens as a result — use consequence.
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