When we collaborate with others to tackle novel problems, we anticipate how
they will perform their part of the task to coordinate behavior effectively. We
might estimate how well someone else will perform by extrapolating from
estimates of how well we ourselves would perform. This account predicts that
our metacognitive model should make accurate predictions when projected
onto people as good as, or worse than, us but not on those whose abilities
exceed our own.We demonstrate just such a patter…
Read moreWhen we collaborate with others to tackle novel problems, we anticipate how
they will perform their part of the task to coordinate behavior effectively. We
might estimate how well someone else will perform by extrapolating from
estimates of how well we ourselves would perform. This account predicts that
our metacognitive model should make accurate predictions when projected
onto people as good as, or worse than, us but not on those whose abilities
exceed our own.We demonstrate just such a pattern and that it leads to worse
coordination when working with people more skilled than ourselves. Metacognitive
projection is associated with a specific activity pattern in anterior
lateral prefrontal cortex (alPFC47). Manipulation of alPFC47 activity altered
metacognitive projection and impaired interpersonal social coordination. By
contrast, monitoring of other individuals’ observable performance and outcomes
is associated with a distinct pattern of activity in the posterior temporal
parietal junction (TPJp).