
Dr. Axel Moore
· Assistant Professor, Biomedical EngineeringVerifiedUniversity of California, Berkeley · Biomedical Engineering
Active 1997–2025
About
Axel Moore is a doctoral researcher at the University of Delaware. Axel's research focuses on soft tissue mechanics and lubrication. Articular cartilage is the primary tissue of interest.
Research topics
- Computer Science
- Political Science
- Medicine
- Psychology
- Economics
- Developmental psychology
- Public relations
- Internet privacy
- Pathology
- Microeconomics
- Mathematics
- Positive economics
- Accounting
- Social psychology
- Management science
- Data science
- Applied psychology
- Engineering
- Epistemology
- Statistics
Selected publications
Peer Community in Psychology: A platform for peer review of preprints across psychology
2025-06-11
preprintOpen accessThe current scientific publishing landscape consists of a small number of for-profit publishers who rely on the free or underpaid labor of researchers, as well as researchers who endorse and perpetuate the system in the name of prestige. The purpose of this brief editorial is to introduce an alternative model, Peer Community in (PCI) Psychology. PCI Psychology is a journal-independent service that reviews and recommends preprints related to psychological research and scholarship. PCI Psychology is a community-focused platform with no costs to researchers, and emphasizes openness, transparency, and methodological rigor. The purpose of this brief paper is to provide an overview of PCI Psychology and how it works, document the history of the initiative, and address some questions or concerns that authors might have.
Is overconfidence an individual difference?
Judgment and Decision Making · 2025-01-01 · 5 citations
articleOpen accessSenior authorAbstract Some scholars have treated overconfidence as an individual difference—that is, assuming the tendency to be overconfident is stable within a person and differs meaningfully from person to person. We question this assumption. We investigate consistency within individuals between its three forms—overestimation, overplacement, and overprecision—in multiple domains (Study 1a and 1b), at multiple times (Study 1b and 2), and with multiple measures (Study 3a and 3b). We find mixed evidence of trait-like consistency. We do find some evidence of within-individual stability across domains and time points. However, we find little consistency across different measures of the same form of overconfidence—specifically overprecision. Instead, we find more consistent evidence that overconfidence varies situationally and contextually.
2025-06-29
preprintOpen accessSenior authorWe introduce a formal model of how individuals form beliefs by simplifying complex real information through assumptions. We demonstrate that such assumed information, while often necessary, can lead to systematic excess certainty. By modeling belief formation under model uncertainty, we show that gaining new perspectives can increase subjective uncertainty, contrary to traditional models. The paper explores implications for persuasion and disagreement, emphasizing how differing unacknowledged assumptions obstruct belief convergence. A companion paper extends the theory and provides empirical support for the predicted patterns of overprecision and disagreement.
Peer Community in Psychology: A platform for peer review of preprints across psychology
2025-06-11
preprintOpen accessThe current scientific publishing landscape consists of a small number of for-profit publishers who rely on the free or underpaid labor of researchers, as well as researchers who endorse and perpetuate the system in the name of prestige. The purpose of this brief editorial is to introduce an alternative model, Peer Community in (PCI) Psychology. PCI Psychology is a journal-independent service that reviews and recommends preprints related to psychological research and scholarship. PCI Psychology is a community-focused platform with no costs to researchers, and emphasizes openness, transparency, and methodological rigor. The purpose of this brief paper is to provide an overview of PCI Psychology and how it works, document the history of the initiative, and address some questions or concerns that authors might have.
Is Overconfidence a Trait? An Adversarial Collaboration
Psychological Science · 2025-12-01
articleA fundamental underlying question about the nature of overconfidence has continued to be subject to scholarly dispute: Is overconfidence a genuine psychological trait? To advance this contested research topic, we engaged in an adversarial collaboration in which two research teams agreed upon a set of critical tests and preregistered their analyses and predictions prior to data collection. Our study ( N = 942; U.S. adults from CloudConnect) leverages a methodological innovation: To measure trait overconfidence absent task-related confounds, we developed a set of novel tasks in which performance is ostensibly random. When we assess confidence this way, we find robust relationships across tasks as measured by both confirmatory factor analyses and raw correlations. This indicates that some people do believe that they are able to perform relatively well on tasks even when there is little reason for that confidence. Our results support the claim that overconfidence might be a trait.
Eliciting and Modeling Probability Forecasts of Continuous Events
2024-07-18
preprintOpen access1st authorCorrespondingWe report the results of two experiments exploring methods for eliciting and scoring forecasts of continuous quantities. The results recommend binned probability elicitations over percentile elicitations and self-set bins.
Thoughts of God and acceptance of artificial intelligence: A replication
2024-03-11 · 2 citations
preprintOpen access1st authorCorrespondingWe report our attempts to replicate results by Karataş and Cutright (2023), in which thoughts of God increased people’s receptivity to advice from artificially intelligent advisors. We attempt faithful replications of the five online studies from the original paper all with larger sample sizes than the originals. We fail to find evidence consistent with the claims of Karataş and Cutright. Our results suggest that if the original effect exists, it is too small to have been detected by the original studies.
Overprecision in the Survey of Professional Forecasters
Collabra Psychology · 2024-01-01 · 3 citations
articleOpen accessSenior authorEvery decision depends on a forecast of its consequences. We examine the calibration of the single longest and most complete forecasting project. The Survey of Professional Forecasters has, since 1968, collected predictions of key economic indicators such as unemployment, inflation, and economic growth. Here, we test the accuracy of those forecasts (n = 16,559) and measure the degree to which they fall victim to overconfidence, both overoptimism and overprecision. We find forecasts are overly precise; forecasters report 53% confidence in the accuracy of their forecasts, but are correct only 23% of the time. By contrast, forecasts show little evidence of optimistic bias. These results have important implications for how organizations ought to make use of forecasts. Moreover, we employ novel methodology in analyzing archival data: we split our dataset into exploration and validation halves. We submitted results from the exploration half to Collabra:Psychology. Following editorial input, we updated our analysis plan for the validation dataset, preregistering only analyses that were consistent across different economic indicators and analytic specifications. This manuscript presents results from the full dataset, prioritizing results that were consistent in both halves of the data.
Model uncertainty and overprecision (TAO-RRT)
AEA Randomized Controlled Trials · 2024-10-31
dataset1st authorCorrespondingEliciting and Modeling Probability Forecasts of Continuous Events
2024-07-18
preprintOpen access1st authorCorrespondingWe report the results of two experiments exploring methods for eliciting and scoring forecasts of continuous quantities. The results recommend binned probability elicitations over percentile elicitations and self-set bins.
Recent grants
Error and Bias in Comparative Judgment
NSF · $191k · 2005–2008
Frequent coauthors
- 76 shared
Garret Christensen
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
- 75 shared
Allan Dafoe
DeepMind (United Kingdom)
- 72 shared
Andrew K. Rose
University of Pittsburgh
- 69 shared
Edward Miguel
- 36 shared
Max H. Bazerman
- 35 shared
Jennifer M. Logg
Georgetown University
- 34 shared
Uriel Haran
- 33 shared
Daniel J. Benjamin
University of California, Los Angeles
Education
- 2000
Ph.D., Organization Behavior
Northwestern University
- 1993
BA, Psychology
Carleton College
Awards & honors
- Inaugural Houder Fellow in Pediatric Spinal Deformity, Child…
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