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Science Quickly

Poor Sleepers Worse at Recognizing Unfamiliar Faces

Science Quickly

Scientific American

Science

4.41.4K Ratings

🗓️ 19 October 2016

⏱️ 2 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Subjects suffering insomnia got more wrong answers in a face-matching task—but they were paradoxically more confident of their responses. Christopher Intagliata reports. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

This is scientific American 60 second science. I'm Christopher and Tagyatta.

0:06.4

Standing in line at passport control isn't the most relaxing experience.

0:11.5

The officer looks at your passport, at you, back at your passport, back at you,

0:16.7

kind of nerve-wracking. But put yourself in their shoes for a sec. They're trying to figure

0:20.9

out if your face is actually the same one as that little thumbnail image on the page.

0:26.0

It's not the easiest task.

0:28.0

People are often surprised at how poor they are.

0:30.0

David White is a cognitive psychologist at the University of New South Wales in Australia,

0:35.0

and he's even tested Australian passport agents at the task.

0:39.0

The performance was no better than a group of untrained university students.

0:43.0

In his latest study, White and his colleagues investigated how poor sleep, less than six and a half hours

0:48.0

a night, might affect facial recognition.

0:51.0

Turns out, bad sleep did indeed lead to more wrong answers on a face matching task.

0:57.1

And study subjects suffering from insomnia, meaning poor sleep plus other symptoms like anxiety scored badly too compared to well-rested subjects.

1:05.4

But here's the twist. When they made errors, people in this insomnia group, they

1:11.9

actually had higher levels of confidence.

1:14.0

They were more sure of their wrong answers.

1:17.0

The results are in Royal Society Open Science.

1:20.0

To avoid these kinds of errors, White suggests security organizations pay more attention to which employees may be sleeping poorly.

1:27.5

That's more a sort of everyday occurrence, I suppose, for certainly new parents or people that may have their sleep

1:35.5

disrupted in fact through shift work which is very common in these security and

1:40.6

forensic settings and that they screen staffers for signs of insomnia and consider assigning those

...

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