Abstract

Visual hindsight bias, also known as the "saw-it-all-along" effect, is the tendency to overestimate one's perceptual abilities with the aid of outcome knowledge. Recently, Giroux et al. (2022, Emotion, https://doi.org/10.1037/emo0001068 ) reported robust visual hindsight bias for emotional faces except for happy. We examined whether the difficulty of emotional processing could explain their finding. As in Giroux et al., participants saw a blurred image of an emotional face (happy, angry, or neutral) that progressed to clear and were instructed to stop the clearing process when they were able to identify the emotion (foresight trials). They then were shown the clearest image of each face and determined the emotion, followed by a memory task where they were asked to adjust the blur levels to indicate the point at which they had identified the emotion earlier (hindsight trials). Experiment 1 replicated Giroux et al.'s finding, showing that participants stopped the image at a higher degree of blur during the hindsight trials than they had during the foresight trials (i.e., a visual hindsight bias) for the angry and neutral faces but not happy faces. Experiment 2 manipulated the perceptual difficulty of angry and happy faces. While the easy faces replicated the results of Experiment 1, both angry and happy faces produced strong bias when made difficult. A multinomial processing tree model suggests that visual hindsight bias for emotional faces, while robust, is sensitive to perceptual processing difficulties across emotions.

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