Metacognition and Uncertainty Communication in Humans and Large Language Models

April 18, 2025 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› Current Directions in Psychological Science

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Authors Mark Steyvers, Megan A. K. Peters arXiv ID 2504.14045 Category cs.AI: Artificial Intelligence Cross-listed cs.HC Citations 9 Venue Current Directions in Psychological Science Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
Metacognition--the capacity to monitor and evaluate one's own knowledge and performance--is foundational to human decision-making, learning, and communication. As large language models (LLMs) become increasingly embedded in both high-stakes and widespread low-stakes contexts, it is important to assess whether, how, and to what extent they exhibit metacognitive abilities. Here, we provide an overview of current knowledge of LLMs' metacognitive capacities, how they might be studied, and how they relate to our knowledge of metacognition in humans. We show that while humans and LLMs can sometimes appear quite aligned in their metacognitive capacities and behaviors, it is clear many differences remain; attending to these differences is important for enhancing human-AI collaboration. Finally, we discuss how endowing future LLMs with more sensitive and more calibrated metacognition may also help them develop new capacities such as more efficient learning, self-direction, and curiosity.
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