Timothy D. Wilson
in Black box
Timothy D. Wilson (Timothy DeCamp Wilson), American social psychologist. Co-author with Richard Nisbett of "Telling More Than We Can Know" (Psychological Review, 1977); he spent his career at the University of Virginia. He later wrote Strangers to Ourselves (2002) on the adaptive unconscious and did influential work on affective forecasting.
Stake§
Scientific and reputational — the same challenge to the validity of verbal self-report, with no commercial or ideological interest.
Wilson's contribution to this topic is as co-author of the confabulation paper, and his later Strangers to Ourselves extends its claim: much of mental life runs in an adaptive unconscious the person cannot introspect, so the self they report is partly a construction. The position is the human counterpart to the machine question of whether a system's stated reasons match its computation, taken up for language models in Turpin.