“…However, EST has broad potential and can be applied to understanding bias in many types of referent-dependent judgments (i.e., judgments that require evidence for a target to be compared with evidence for a specific referent or set of referents; see Windschitl et al, 2008). These referent-dependent judgments include comparative ability and trait judgments (e.g., Alicke & Govorun, 2005;Alicke, Klotz, Breitenbecher, Yurak, & Vredenburg, 1995;Dun-ning, Meyerowitz, & Holzberg, 1989;Goethals, Messick, & Alli-son, 1991;Hoorens, 1995;Kruger, 1999;Pahl & Eiser, 2005), comparative optimism judgments (e.g., Blanton et al, 2001;Burger & Burns, 1988;Chambers et al, 2003;Eiser et al, 2001;Heine & Lehman, 1995;HelwegLarsen & Shepperd, 2001;Klar, Medding, & Sarel, 1996;Klein & Weinstein, 1997;Price, 2001;Price, Smith, & Lench, 2006;Rose, Endo, Windschitl, & Suls, in press;Weinstein, 1980Weinstein, , 1984, and generic direct-comparison judgments (e.g., Giladi & Klar, 2002;Klar, 2002;Posavac, Brakus, Jain, & Cronley, 2006;Suls, Krizan, Chambers, & Mortensen, 2007;Windschitl et al, 2008).…”