| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 7289857 | Consciousness and Cognition | 2014 | 10 Pages | 
Abstract
												Emotion and cognition are known to interact during human decision processes. In this study we focus on a specific kind of cognition, namely metacognition. Our experiment induces a negative emotion, worry, during a perceptual task. In a numerosity task subjects have to make a two alternative forced choice and then reveal their confidence in this decision. We measure metacognition in terms of discrimination and calibration abilities. Our results show that metacognition, but not choice, is affected by the level of worry anticipated before the decision. Under worry individuals tend to have better metacognition in terms of the two measures. Furthermore understanding the formation of confidence is better explained with taking into account the level of worry in the model. This study shows the importance of an emotional component in the formation and the quality of the subjective probabilities.
											Related Topics
												
													Life Sciences
													Neuroscience
													Cognitive Neuroscience
												
											Authors
												Sébastien Massoni, 
											