Psychologists Show Students Doubled Attention Estimates in 2000 Spotlight Effect Study
Updated
Updated · spacedaily.com · Jun 11
Psychologists Show Students Doubled Attention Estimates in 2000 Spotlight Effect Study
1 articles · Updated · spacedaily.com · Jun 11
Summary
Students wearing a Barry Manilow T-shirt guessed 46% of observers would remember the face, but only 23% actually did, quantifying what researchers called the spotlight effect.
Thomas Gilovich, Kenneth Savitsky and Victoria Medvec found the bias persisted beyond embarrassment: with self-chosen shirts, participants estimated 48% recall while actual recognition fell to 8%.
Group-discussion tests showed the same pattern for comments, suggesting people overestimate how much both awkward and successful moments stand out to others.
The researchers tied the effect to egocentric bias: people start from their own vivid self-awareness and fail to adjust enough for how little attention others are actually paying.
A related experiment on the illusion of transparency found liars expected 48.8% detection versus 25.6% in reality, extending the same overestimation from visible behavior to inner states.