Inferring Perspective Versus Getting Perspective: Underestimating the Value of Being in Another Person’s Shoes

First Published February 24, 2017 Research Article Find in PubMed

Authors

1
 
School of Entrepreneurship and Management, Shanghai Tech University
by this author
, 2
 
Department of Psychology, Elmhurst College
by this author
, 3
 
Booth School of Business, University of Chicago
by this author
First Published Online: February 24, 2017

People use at least two strategies to solve the challenge of understanding another person’s mind: inferring that person’s perspective by reading his or her behavior (theorization) and getting that person’s perspective by experiencing his or her situation (simulation). The five experiments reported here demonstrate a strong tendency for people to underestimate the value of simulation. Predictors estimated a stranger’s emotional reactions toward 50 pictures. They could either infer the stranger’s perspective by reading his or her facial expressions or simulate the stranger’s perspective by watching the pictures he or she viewed. Predictors were substantially more accurate when they got perspective through simulation, but overestimated the accuracy they had achieved by inferring perspective. Predictors’ miscalibrated confidence stemmed from overestimating the information revealed through facial expressions and underestimating the similarity in people’s reactions to a given situation. People seem to underappreciate a useful strategy for understanding the minds of others, even after they gain firsthand experience with both strategies.

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