WASHINGTON - Just how confident are you that you made the right decision? New research has uncovered a part of the brain that's larger in people who seem particularly introspective.
Some people know their minds better than others, and research being reported Friday is a step at understanding the biology behind that important part of human consciousness. It's work necessary for one day tackling brain injuries or diseases that rob people of key aspects of self-reflection - such as the schizophrenia patients who aren't aware that they're ill and thus don't take their medication.
By learning the neurologic basis of self-awareness, "might we be able to come up with potential strategies to intervene in these cases and improve people's introspective ability?" asks Stephen Fleming of University College London, lead author of the new research published in the journal Science.
Introspection is basically thinking about your thinking, a way to judge your own thoughts and actions - and inherently difficult to study. The British research team devised a way to measure introspective ability by comparing people's confidence in a decision they made with the accuracy of that decision.
Here's how it worked: Researchers briefly showed 32 healthy people computer screens containing patterns, one slightly brighter than the rest, similar to tests used in eye exams. First, the volunteers had to rapidly choose which screen contained the brighter pattern. Because some people are simply better observers, the computer adjusted the level of difficulty to each individual so that the task was equally hard for everyone and no one could be completely sure their answer was correct.
Then the volunteers had to rate how confident they were in their answer. The idea: People with good introspective abilities would be more confident when they were right, and more likely to second-guess themselves when they really were wrong. People who are just brash and overconfident might lead an outsider to think they were right, but in reality wouldn't show that correlation.