Do Young Children Use Verbal Disfluency as a Cue to Their Own Confidence?
Eloise West, Carolyn Baer, Lisa Yu, Darko Odic

TL;DR
This study explores whether young children use verbal disfluency, like pauses and hesitations, to judge their own confidence in answers.
Contribution
The study reveals a dissociation between verbal fluency and metacognitive confidence in young children.
Findings
Children's verbal disfluency predicted both answer accuracy and their confidence reports.
Confidence and fluency were dissociated when accuracy and confidence diverged.
Fluency predicted metacognitive judgments only when confidence and accuracy aligned.
Abstract
Metacognitive reasoning is central to decision‐making. For every decision, we can also judge our trust in that decision, or our level of confidence. The mechanisms and representations underlying reasoning about confidence remain debated. We test whether children rely on processing fluency to infer their own confidence: do decisions that come quickly and easily lead to high confidence, while decisions that are slow and effortful result in low confidence? Using children's verbal disfluency—fillers (e.g., “umm,” “uhh”), hedges (e.g., “I think,” “maybe”), and pauses in speech—as an observable index of processing fluency, we assess whether children's reports of confidence are a read‐out of their verbal disfluency. Five‐to‐eight‐year‐olds answered semantic questions about animals and performed perceptual comparisons, then reported their confidence in their answers in a two‐alternative…
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Taxonomy
TopicsReading and Literacy Development · Child and Animal Learning Development · Language Development and Disorders
