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From skills-for-humanity
Applies metacognitive framework to monitor comprehension, calibrate confidence, assess reasoning quality. Useful for complex problem solving or when you doubt your understanding.
npx claudepluginhub human-avatar/skills-for-humanityHow this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/skills-for-humanity:cognition-metacognitionThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Metacognition — the capacity to think about your own thinking — is what separates competent performance from expert adaptation. John Flavell, who established metacognition as a formal field of study at Stanford in the 1970s, identified three interlocking components: **metacognitive knowledge** (what you know about cognition in general and your own cognitive patterns in particular), **metacognit...
Routes to the right cognitive science tool based on your situation. Use when you need to understand attention, mental models, metacognition, or cognitive load.
Captures confidence ratings (0–100) before and after a knowledge attempt, compares them to identify overconfidence or underconfidence patterns for metacognitive awareness.
Applies canonical 7D meta-cognitive reasoning to complex problems with dependencies and tradeoffs, delivering clear answers with confidence scores and caveats.
Share bugs, ideas, or general feedback.
Metacognition — the capacity to think about your own thinking — is what separates competent performance from expert adaptation. John Flavell, who established metacognition as a formal field of study at Stanford in the 1970s, identified three interlocking components: metacognitive knowledge (what you know about cognition in general and your own cognitive patterns in particular), metacognitive monitoring (tracking your comprehension and reasoning in real time), and metacognitive control (adjusting your approach when monitoring reveals a problem). All three are necessary. Most people engage in only the first.
The deepest metacognitive failure is the illusion of knowing — the conviction that you understand something you have only recognised. Familiarity and comprehension feel identical from the inside. You've read about second-order effects; you can nod when someone mentions them; but can you predict them in a novel case? The Dunning-Kruger phenomenon is partially a metacognitive failure: the incompetent are unable to recognise their own incompetence because competence is required to accurately monitor competence. Metacognitive skill is the corrective.
This skill applies Flavell's three-component framework as a practical diagnostic. It is not a general survey of your cognitive patterns — it is a targeted assessment of your thinking quality in a specific domain or decision, right now.
Step 1: Define the Cognitive Task What is the specific domain, decision, or problem where thinking quality needs to be assessed? Be concrete: "understanding how our pricing affects customer retention" is more useful than "understanding the business." The metacognitive assessment will be more accurate and actionable if it is scoped to a specific task.
Framing check: Confirm the specific cognitive task before continuing. State what you've identified — the domain or decision and what metacognitive dimension seems most at stake — in one sentence, then use AskUserQuestion:
Step 2: Assess Metacognitive Knowledge What do you actually know in this domain? Apply the distinction between:
Map the current state of knowledge against this hierarchy. Where does recognition end and genuine comprehension begin? What is being mistaken for understanding?
Step 3: Apply Metacognitive Monitoring Test comprehension in real time using three diagnostic probes:
Before narrowing: Use AskUserQuestion after running the monitoring probes:
Step 4: Diagnose Metacognitive Control What adjustments, if any, are being made when monitoring reveals gaps? Three failure modes:
Identify which failure mode is present and what the right control adjustment would be.
Step 5: Calibrate Confidence Express confidence as a percentage for the key claims being made in this domain. Test for the common calibration failure modes:
Kahneman's System 1/System 2 distinction is relevant here: fast intuitive confidence is not the same as calibrated epistemic confidence. A feeling of certainty is evidence of familiarity, not necessarily accuracy.
Before proceeding, use the AskUserQuestion tool. State your interpretation of the situation in 1–2 sentences — what domain is being assessed and what the primary metacognitive issue appears to be — then ask:
Proceed based on their selection. If the user reframes, incorporate the correction before running any analysis.
Metacognitive Knowledge Assessment
| Area | Knowledge Type | Status | Evidence |
|---|---|---|---|
| Recognition / Explanation / Application / Generation | Solid / Partial / Illusory |
Monitoring Results
Control Diagnosis: [Which failure mode is present and what the right adjustment is]
Confidence Calibration
| Claim | Stated confidence | Assessed calibration | Adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|
Priority Gaps: [The two or three most consequential things you don't know that you might think you know]
Metacognition is the most transferable cognitive skill because it applies to every domain — but it is also the most demanding, because it requires honest appraisal of your own limitations. The output of this skill should feel mildly uncomfortable. If it doesn't, the monitoring step wasn't rigorous enough.
The nearest neighbor is /epistemology-epistemic-status — which examines the warrant for specific claims. Metacognition operates on the thinker (what do you actually understand and how well are you monitoring it?); epistemology-epistemic-status operates on the claims (what is the state of evidence for this belief?). Both are often needed when expertise is in question.
For the confidence calibration specifically, /probability-confidence-calibration provides a quantitative framework for expressing and testing uncertainty.
After delivering this output, use AskUserQuestion to offer the next move:
/cognition-mental-models — Audit the specific models driving the gaps identified in this assessment/epistemology-epistemic-status — Examine the evidential warrant for the claims where confidence was hardest to calibrate/probability-confidence-calibration — Apply formal probability calibration to the confidence estimates surfaced here