Washington: We are actually better at remembering names than faces, according to a study. Researchers from the University of York in the UK suggest that when we castigate ourselves for forgetting someone’s name we are placing unfair demands on our brains.
Remembering a person’s face in this situation relies on recognition, but remembering their name is a matter of recall, according to the study published in the Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology.
It is already well-established that human beings are much better at the former than the latter, the researchers said. They also point out that we only become aware that we have forgotten a name when we have already recognised the face.
“We rarely have to confront the problem of knowing a name, but not a face — remaining blissfully unaware of the countless faces we should recognise, but walk straight past on the street,” researchers said.
For the study, the researchers designed a “fair test”, pitting names against faces on a level playing field. They set up an experiment to place equal demands on the ability of participants to remember faces and names by testing both in a game of recognition.
The results showed participants scored consistently higher at remembering names than faces — recognising as little as 64 per cent of faces and up to 83 per cent of names in the tests. “Our study suggests that, while many people may be bad at remembering names, they are likely to be even worse at remembering faces,” said Rob Jenkins, from the University of York.