The truly incompetent may never know the depths of their own incompetence, a

游客2024-06-10  11

问题     The truly incompetent may never know the depths of their own incompetence, a pair of social psychologists said on Thursday.
    "We found again and again that people who perform poorly relative to their peers tended to think that they did rather well," Justin Kruger, co-author of a study on the subject, said in a telephone interview.
    Kruger and co-author David Dunning found that when it came to a variety of skills—logical reasoning, grammar, even sense of humor—people who essentially were inept never realized it, while those who had some ability were self-critical.
    It had little to do with innate modesty, Kruger said, but rather with a central paradox: Incompetents lack the basic skills to evaluate their performance realistically. Once they get those skills, they know where they stand, even if that is at the bottom.
    Americans and Western Europeans especially had an unrealistically sunny assessment of their own capabilities, Dunning said by telephone in a separate interview, while Japanese and Koreans tended to give a reasonable assessment of their performance. In certain areas, such as athletic performance, which can be easily quantified, there is less self-delusion, the researchers said. But even in some cases in which the failure should seem obvious, the perpetrator is blithely unaware of the problem.
    This was especially tree in the area of logical reasoning, where research subjects—students at Cornell University, where the two researchers were based—often rated themselves highly even when they flubbed all questions in a reasoning test.
    Later, when the students were instructed in logical reasoning, they scored better on a test but rated themselves lower, having learned what constituted competence in this area.
    Grammar was another area in which objective knowledge was helpful in determining competence, but the more subjective area of humor posed different challenges, the researchers said.
    Participants were asked to rate how funny certain jokes were, and compare their responses with what an expert panel of comedians thought. On average, participants overestimated their sense of humor by about 16 percentage points.
    This might be thought of as the "above-average effect", the notion that most Americans would rate themselves as above average, a statistical impossibility.
    The researchers also conducted pilot studies of doctors and gun enthusiasts. The doctors overestimated how well they had performed on a test of medical diagnoses and the gun fanciers thought they knew more than they actually did about gun safety.
    So who should be trusted: The person who admits incompetence or the one who shows confidence? Neither, according to Dunning. "You can’t take them at their word. You’ve got to take a look at their performance," Dunning added. [br] Incompetent people rarely know the depths of their own incompetence because they ______.

选项 A、are too dull to know what competence is
B、are not skillful at logical reasoning, grammar, and sense of humor
C、lack the basic skills to evaluate their performance realistically
D、have some ability to overcriticize themselves

答案 C

解析 文章前四段的大致内容为:真正无能的人从来不知道他们有多无能,研究多次发现比同龄人表现差的人总是认为自己做得很好。研究还发现这些人在各种技能方面——逻辑推理、语法,甚至幽默感——都意识不到自己的无能,而那些有一定能力的人却总是自责无能。这和天生的谦虚无关,而是一个自相矛盾的问题:无能者缺乏实事求是地评价自己的表现的基本技能。一旦他们有了这种能力,他们就会了解自己所处的位置,哪怕是最底层。由此可知,本题正确答案为C。
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