OVERCONFIDENT PEOPLE ARE MORE ARE MORE TALENTED
Overconfident people are
better at convincing others that they’re more talented than they really are,
and therefore are more likely to get promotions and reach high-level positions,
a new study indicates.
The researchers added that these “self-deceived” people are also
more likely to overestimate other people’s abilities and to take greater risks.
And finally, people who underestimate themselves are regarded as
less capable by their colleagues, according to the British researchers. Their
findings were published Aug. 27 in the journal PLoS One.
The study included 72 university students who, on the first day of
a course, were asked to predict their own and other students’ final marks.
Fifteen percent of the students made accurate predictions, 45 percent
underestimated their scores and 40 percent were overconfident.
Students who predicted higher marks for themselves were also
predicted to have higher grades by others, whether or not that turned out to be
true.
“These findings suggest that people don’t always reward the most
accomplished individual but rather the most self-deceived. We think this
supports an evolutionary theory of self-deception,” study co-lead author Vivek
Nityananda, a research associate at Newcastle University, said in a university
news release.
“It can be beneficial to have others believe you are better than
you are and the best way to do this is to deceive yourself — which might be
what we have evolved to do,” Nityananda added.
“This can cause problems as overconfident people may also be more
likely to take risks,” he said.
Study co-author Dr. Shakti Lamba, of the University of Exeter,
added: “If overconfident people are more likely to be risk prone then by
promoting them we may be creating institutions, such as banks and armies, that
are more vulnerable to risk.”
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