The Wall Street Journal recently served readers this slap-in-the-face headline: "You're Not as Smart as You Think." The piece was written by two psychologists, Christopher Chabris and Patrick Heck, detailing a new study that they and another colleague published in PLOS One, in which they found that 65 percent of Americans reported they were "more intelligent than the average person."
The survey respondents actually seem pretty modest, in contrast to past claims like "everyone thinks they are above average." In the Journal contributors' study, 23 percent of people disagreed with the statement that they were above average, and 12 percent said they didn't know. And of the 65 percent who believed themselves to be above average, a good number probably are.
So some people aren't as smart as they think they are, and the headline applies to them. But others are smarter than they think they are. More on that later.
Using the word "average" in the question introduces an additional layer of confusion. Half of everyone must be below the median; that's the definition of median. But another type of average, the arithmetic mean, can differ from the median when there's a lopsided distribution.
Accusing people of overconfidence also assumes that intelligence is well-defined and quantifiable enough that there's real meaning in comparing ourselves to an average.
Chabris, who works for Geisinger Health System in Pennsylvania and has a background in both psychology and neuroscience, said he set up the study not to knock people off self-constructed pedestals, but to investigate the current level of belief in various brain myths. Two that particularly irk him: the notion that people are either right- or left-brained, and the myth that most of us only use 10 percent of our brains.
Belief in the 10 percent myth is so pervasive that even some people who are genuinely above average buy into it. It may have originated as a distortion of the idea that many people don't live up to their potential. Experts say there's ample evidence that even the most blatant underachievers are using most of what's in their heads.
Chabris said he and his colleagues surveyed a cross section of 2,821 Americans, by phone or online, about their level of beliefs in a selection of popular myths. They also included a question about how the subjects felt about their own relative intelligence, as a way to test what Chabris called a cliché of popular psychology — the notion that most people think they are above average in intelligence.