Accuracy of self-monitoring: does experience, ability or case difficulty matter?
Wolf E HautzSebastian SchubertStefan K SchauberOlga Kunina-HabenichtStefanie C HautzJuliane E KämmerKevin W EvaPublished in: Medical education (2019)
This study suggests that the accuracy of self-monitoring is context specific, being heavily influenced by the struggles students experience with a particular case rather than reflecting a generic ability to know when one is right or wrong. That said, the apparent capacity to self-monitor increases developmentally because increasing experience provides a greater likelihood of success with presented problems.