Contemporary research on the meta-level usually uses confidence judgments and metacognitive sensitivity as primary indicators; the distinction between perspective meta-knowledge and processual metacognitive accuracy requires separate operationalization. The present theory separates these functions into three levels. Perspective meta-knowledge defines the initial first-person givenness of experience. Applied meta-knowledge of content directs this givenness toward a specific response, memory, decision, or action. Processual metacognitive accuracy characterizes the correspondence between confidence and actual first-order performance accuracy. This distinction defines three operational domains: the perspectival givenness of experience, the accuracy of content evaluation, and cognitive load as a contextual modulator of applied meta-operations. On this basis, the article presents differential predictions for obsessive-compulsive disorder, depersonalization-derealization disorder, and ketamine-induced altered states. The theory predicts that indices of confidence-accuracy coupling may vary independently of indices of perspectival givenness, and that clinical and pharmacological states will form distinct profiles across parameters of applied meta-knowledge, switching, and self-referential integration.
Ilya Tarasov (Wed,) studied this question.