The Confidence Database.

Rahnev D., Desender K., Lee ALF., Adler WT., Aguilar-Lleyda D., Akdoğan B., Arbuzova P., Atlas LY., Balcı F., Bang JW., Bègue I., Birney DP., Brady TF., Calder-Travis J., Chetverikov A., Clark TK., Davranche K., Denison RN., Dildine TC., Double KS., Duyan YA., Faivre N., Fallow K., Filevich E., Gajdos T., Gallagher RM., de Gardelle V., Gherman S., Haddara N., Hainguerlot M., Hsu T-Y., Hu X., Iturrate I., Jaquiery M., Kantner J., Koculak M., Konishi M., Koß C., Kvam PD., Kwok SC., Lebreton M., Lempert KM., Ming Lo C., Luo L., Maniscalco B., Martin A., Massoni S., Matthews J., Mazancieux A., Merfeld DM., O'Hora D., Palser ER., Paulewicz B., Pereira M., Peters C., Philiastides MG., Pfuhl G., Prieto F., Rausch M., Recht S., Reyes G., Rouault M., Sackur J., Sadeghi S., Samaha J., Seow TXF., Shekhar M., Sherman MT., Siedlecka M., Skóra Z., Song C., Soto D., Sun S., van Boxtel JJA., Wang S., Weidemann CT., Weindel G., Wierzchoń M., Xu X., Ye Q., Yeon J., Zou F., Zylberberg A.

Understanding how people rate their confidence is critical for the characterization of a wide range of perceptual, memory, motor and cognitive processes. To enable the continued exploration of these processes, we created a large database of confidence studies spanning a broad set of paradigms, participant populations and fields of study. The data from each study are structured in a common, easy-to-use format that can be easily imported and analysed using multiple software packages. Each dataset is accompanied by an explanation regarding the nature of the collected data. At the time of publication, the Confidence Database (which is available at https://osf.io/s46pr/) contained 145 datasets with data from more than 8,700 participants and almost 4 million trials. The database will remain open for new submissions indefinitely and is expected to continue to grow. Here we show the usefulness of this large collection of datasets in four different analyses that provide precise estimations of several foundational confidence-related effects.

DOI

10.1038/s41562-019-0813-1

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2020-03-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

4

Pages

317 - 325

Total pages

8

Keywords

Adult, Choice Behavior, Databases, Factual, Datasets as Topic, Humans, Mental Processes, Metacognition, Psychometrics, Reaction Time, Task Performance and Analysis

Permalink More information Close