Study - Dunning-Kruger effect in anti-vaccine attitudes

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ASPartOfMe
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16 Jan 2019, 3:03 am

Study explores role of Dunning-Kruger effect in anti-vaccine attitude

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A study that helps explain why anti-vaccine attitudes still persist, despite clear evidence on the benefits of immunization to public health has been selected by an international scientific committee to be given the Atlas award. The survey findings, published in Social Science & Medicine, clearly show the Dunning-Kruger effect at play and demonstrate that people who lack expertise fail to recognize their own lack of knowledge.

To explore the Dunning-Kruger effect and its role in anti-vaccine ("anti-vax") attitudes towards mandatory vaccination policies, and the causes of autism in the new study, Dr. Motta and colleagues, including Timothy Callaghan, Assistant Professor of Public Health at Texas A & M University, and Steven Sylvester, Assistant Professor of Public Policy at Utah Valley University, surveyed more than 1,300 American adults. Study participants were asked to take a quiz testing their knowledge about the causes of autism. They were also asked to assess their own knowledge and the knowledge of experts.

The survey results showed that more than a third of study participants (36 percent) believe they knew as much as, or more, than medical doctors and scientists about the causes of autism. While many respondents indicated trust in experts, they also placed high levels of trust in non-experts and the role of non-experts in setting policy.

The survey also found that those with the fewest correct answers on the quiz about the possible causes of autism showed the highest levels of overconfidence in their own knowledge. As reported in the study, "moving from low to high levels of autism knowledge was associated with a 39 percent decrease in overconfidence." Those who know the least are the most confident about their own knowledge.

Dr. Motta's team went on to show that this overconfidence has consequences when it comes to policy attitudes: those with the least amount of knowledge about autism and the most overconfidence were also less likely to support pro-vaccine policies. They were also more likely to elevate the role o


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LoveNotHate
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16 Jan 2019, 4:00 am

All drugs have side-effects, no doctor knows how it will affect you.

People die from "flu shots" every year, despite doctors assuring everyone that they're safe.

Doctors need to take their profession more serious and admit ...

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Prometheus18
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16 Jan 2019, 7:32 am

I'd always make sure my children were vaccinated, but the idea of compulsory vaccination is fascism, pure and simple.



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16 Jan 2019, 7:43 am

It's not just anti-vaxxers...
Strongest opponents of GM foods know the least but think they know the most
The Dunning-Kruger effect and the climate debate
The Dunning-Kruger Effect May Help Explain Trump's Support
Donald Trump is the Dunning-Kruger Effect personified

"There is a cult of ignorance in the United States, and there always has been. The strain of anti-intellectualism has been a constant thread winding its way through our political and cultural life, nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that "my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge."
Isaac Asimov



qualitylife
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16 Jan 2019, 1:03 pm

I've always disliked the Dunning Kruger effect studies, as I don't think that the studies are accurate. Just because the incidence of self professed knowledge is displayed more frequently for comparison to the heights of knowledge that professionals must attain, it doesn't mean that it represents innate ability, only that innate ability, for the uneducated, does not reach full potential. I say that because potential is the word. If humans didn't have the potential to win the lottery, they wouldn't take part in the lottery (or would they)?

Innate ability mixed with potential, usually leads to the best results. When it is an institutionalised version of ability, innate ability, potential, whatever, it gives reason to question authority, and represents a basic human need.