Do I Know You? (A Hidden Brain-Revisionist History special on facial recognition)
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Transcript
Speaker 1 is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedanta.
Speaker 1 If you're like me, you know this feeling. Maybe you're at a party or you're walking down the street and suddenly, out of a sea of passing faces, one of them lights up looking right at you.
Speaker 1
This person starts waving, says hello. This person is glad to see you.
And you?
Speaker 1 You have no idea who you're looking at.
Speaker 1 Recognizing faces is a crucial skill. But although your mind is amazing at identifying your boyfriend or your child in a crowd, there are important limits to this ability.
Speaker 1 Some of us, like me, are extremely bad at it.
Speaker 2 Some of us are terrific.
Speaker 1 Today, we bring you a classic hidden brain episode about people on opposite ends of the facial recognition spectrum.
Speaker 1 We'll also explore how our ability to recognize faces has broad broad implications in our lives.
Speaker 1 And then, in the second part of today's show, we're going to bring you another look at facial recognition from the Revisionist History podcast.
Speaker 1 If you're unfamiliar with the show, Revisionist History is best-selling author Malcolm Gladwell's podcast about things overlooked and misunderstood.
Speaker 1 The show has covered everything from what Americans get wrong about guns to how English muffins get their signature nooks and crannies.
Speaker 1 It turns out that Malcolm, like me, struggles with recognizing faces. His producer, Lucy Sullivan, on the other hand, is exceptionally good at it.
Speaker 1 And Lucy wanted to find out what's going on, or isn't going on, in our brains when we see someone we know.
Speaker 1 She also brings us stories about suspected super recognizer former President Bill Clinton and how face blindness almost ended a friendship.
Speaker 1 Stay tuned after today's hidden brain to hear the special episode of Revisionist History.
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Speaker 1 We'll start with someone whose job requires her to be quick with faces. She's a cop.
Speaker 3 My name's Alison Young and I'm a police officer in the Metropolitan Police in London.
Speaker 1 She started out several years ago working on response teams in East London. These are the cops who mostly just respond to 911 calls.
Speaker 1 Then about three and a half years into that job, she and a bunch of her fellow officers were invited to take a series of tests at a university.
Speaker 3 You get given like three or four different faces and you have to memorize those faces.
Speaker 1
Then a new screen appears with other faces. These ones are obscured in some way way or heavily pixelated.
One of the faces you saw earlier might now show up wearing a beard.
Speaker 3 So you have to try and work out which one of the faces is the face that you've seen before and it's that kind of thing.
Speaker 1
The test of course was measuring how good officers were at recognizing faces. A while later Allison received her results.
She came in second out of all the officers.
Speaker 3 And they asked me to come down to Scotland Yard.
Speaker 1
Scotland Yard, of course, is the headquarters for London Police. When she got there, she was told she was being added to a new unit they were forming.
It was called the Super Recognizer Unit.
Speaker 3 Yes,
Speaker 3 that's the name that they've given.
Speaker 1 Do you feel like a super recogniser?
Speaker 1 Um,
Speaker 3 I don't know. I don't, um, well, I guess so, but
Speaker 3 I don't think I'd necessarily say that a lot
Speaker 3 because it's just the word super, isn't it?
Speaker 2 It just sounds a bit super. It's just...
Speaker 4 I don't know.
Speaker 3 It's just the notion of the word super kind of brings out as if we're
Speaker 3 some sort of superhero or something like that. Whereas
Speaker 3 that isn't the case.
Speaker 1 In other words, don't picture Superman leaping tall buildings in a single bound. Picture instead a bunch of cops sitting in front of computers.
Speaker 1 Members of the Super Recognizers unit would be given the faces of criminal suspects and then try, in essence, to play a matching game.
Speaker 3 Well, there's a catalogue of criminals essentially that are wanted by police.
Speaker 3 And what they decided to develop was a thing called snapping, which meant that we may not know who that person is, but if I look at this face,
Speaker 3 number one photo on this chart, and then I continue to go through further and further and further through different photos, can I find him in any other photos that he's wanted for?
Speaker 3 Which then means that we've got him for one offence of, I don't know, theft. We find him for another
Speaker 3 offence to do with theft, and you end up accruing this one person for around 25 to 30 different crimes.
Speaker 1 Allison was also called on to use her facial recognition skills when she was out in the field. In 2015, for example, the Transit Police came to Scotland Yard for help.
Speaker 1 A 21-year-old woman and two girls aged 15 and 16 complained that a man had inappropriately inappropriately touched them while riding the bus.
Speaker 1 Transit police pulled security footage taken from the various buses. From the pictures and the witness accounts, it appeared his modus operandi was to get on the bus with a newspaper.
Speaker 1 He would sit next to the young woman and then attempt to fondle her under cover of the newspaper.
Speaker 3 And they were overtly young in the respect that some of them were in school uniformed.
Speaker 1 The security footage was grainy. The transit police didn't have an ID on the man and because he struck at different times on different buses they didn't know how to track him down.
Speaker 3
And they basically had said to us we need to find this man. It's young girls, it's predatory, etc.
So myself and my colleague Detective Sergeant Elliot Porret
Speaker 3 did some investigation.
Speaker 1 They studied the security videos and eventually they figured out which station the man tended to frequent.
Speaker 3 After a lot of investigation, we discovered that he had quite a specific route of generally being around Camden Town, which is an area in northwest London.
Speaker 1
Camden Town is a busy neighbourhood. It's heavily populated with lots of shops and tourists and people always milling about.
It's perfect, in other words, for someone to blend into the background.
Speaker 1 Alison and Elliot Porrett knew what they had to do.
Speaker 3 So we made our way to Camden Town
Speaker 3 from Scotland Yard on a Wednesday. I can't remember the exact exact day, but I know it was a Wednesday.
Speaker 1 This was supposed to be just a scouting mission to get a sense of the Camden Town bus station.
Speaker 1 Alison and her partner decided to look through all security footage in the CCTV room.
Speaker 3 So we went to the CCTV bit which was just behind a clear persex glass where people buy their tickets. So it's right by the entrance foyer to the station.
Speaker 1 Detective Porrett began talking with the transit security. Alison was looking through the glass at the commuters milling about the station.
Speaker 3 I saw him walk in, pick up a newspaper and leave
Speaker 3 or go to leave. And at which point I I mean I screamed because I don't know why I did it, I just screamed.
Speaker 3 I don't know, I can't quite work out why, but I just made quite a loud noise and just said to Sergeant Porrett, he's outside.
Speaker 1 They both stopped what they were doing and rushed to catch up with the man.
Speaker 3 But it was quite difficult to get out because we had to go all the way back round, back round to the foyer.
Speaker 3 So by the time we'd got into the main foyer where he was, we couldn't see him anymore.
Speaker 1
They ran out of the station to see if he'd left. They looked left, couldn't see him.
They looked right. Alison caught a quick glimpse of a man disappearing around a corner.
Speaker 1 This fraction of a second was all she needed to recognize her target. The cops started running toward the corner.
Speaker 3 And as we turned, we looked just behind the wall, he was there.
Speaker 1 The officers approached the man.
Speaker 3 As soon as we got up to him, as in face to face with him, the pair of us, like myself, Detective Sergeant Porrett, we were 100 million percent certain that this was the exact same gentleman in all the photos.
Speaker 3 So he was facing handcuffs immediately and explained to him what he was being arrested for, etc.
Speaker 3 And it was extremely noticeable that he was very nervous. His mouth just went completely dry
Speaker 3 and he just wasn't able to speak.
Speaker 1 When we spoke with Alison Young, she was no longer working on the super recognizer unit. She had gone on to other detective work.
Speaker 1 But she said the time she spent on this unusual unit was the first she ever realized she had an above-average ability. The thing is, she's still not sure where the skill comes from.
Speaker 3 Yeah.
Speaker 3 I think my mum was just like, oh, you've got that from me. Modest as ever, my mother.
Speaker 3 But my mum is very, very, very good with faces.
Speaker 5 Very good.
Speaker 3
We'll be walking, just doing some shopping, and she'll see someone and go and speak to them. And she'll have known them from primary school and she'll remember them.
And my mum's, what's she now, 61?
Speaker 3 And she'll went to primary school at like seven or eight with them, and she'll remember them.
Speaker 1 So do you think this is genetic or do you think this is learned?
Speaker 3
I have no idea. I don't think it's learned.
I don't. I don't think you could teach someone.
Speaker 3 I don't think you could teach someone to be able to just do it at all.
Speaker 1 Coming up, how common is Alison's skill? Are you a super recognizer? Can you learn to be one? That and more from a scientist who studies how we identify faces.
Speaker 1 You're listening to Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedanta.
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Speaker 1
This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam.
So the other week I was at the airport and just like everyone else, I showed my driver's license to get past security.
Speaker 1 And it occurred to me that I was operating on an assumption that I think is widely shared. I assumed the TSA officer was pretty good at matching my face with the photo on my driver's license.
Speaker 1 So I asked Mike Burton, he's a professor of psychology at the University of York in the United Kingdom, if that assumption was true.
Speaker 7 It's not, although it is a very common assumption. Most of us think we're pretty good at recognising faces.
Speaker 7 But when you actually test people out, particularly in the situation where somebody who doesn't know you is checking a photo against you, it turns out people are really bad at this.
Speaker 7 Interestingly, even professionals are really bad at it. So we did some work with passport officers where we showed that even passport officers find this a very difficult task and are often inaccurate.
Speaker 1 When I showed my ID at the airport last week, Mike,
Speaker 1 I handed over the ID and I noticed that the officer looked at the ID first and then looked at my face second.
Speaker 1 And I assume there must be some trick to this, that it actually is you're able to make a better connection if you don't actually look at the person's face, that you start with the ID and then look at the face.
Speaker 1 Is there any truth to that?
Speaker 7 No, there's all kinds of techniques that the people who do this professionally use. And what's interesting is they all believe themselves to be performing quite well.
Speaker 7 But when you test them, just like anybody else, they're actually not very accurate at this.
Speaker 1 It's a little terrifying what you're telling me because you're saying that this thing that we're relying on to keep ourselves safe, to run security systems at airports and other places, that this is a fundamentally bad system?
Speaker 7 That is exactly what I'm telling you.
Speaker 7 I think that what's sort of interesting is that we have come to rely on this. But I think we've come to rely on it for an interesting reason.
Speaker 7 We are fantastic at recognising faces, those faces faces of people we know. We can recognize our family and friends across a huge range of conditions, you know, at distances, in bad lights, all kinds.
Speaker 7 But we falsely assume that this means we're quite good at faces in general, and in fact we're not.
Speaker 1 Mike can say all this with some degree of confidence because he ran a study to test for it.
Speaker 7 So we set up this little experiment where we asked people to match pairs of faces. They just have to to say are these two faces the same person or not.
Speaker 1 Mike and his colleagues ran this experiment in both the United Kingdom and in Australia.
Speaker 1 In both countries they selected some faces that were likely to be well known locally but unlikely to be known globally.
Speaker 7
Yes, we use what we call B-list celebrities. So we check it out beforehand.
But we use people who are known very well by the local population.
Speaker 7 These are people like, you newsreaders, local sports people and they tend to be very well known by the local community but not by people internationally.
Speaker 7 What we find then is that when the UK people are matching UK celebrities they're really good at it
Speaker 7 and they're really poor at matching the Australian celebrities, the people that they don't know.
Speaker 7 When you look at the Australian students looking at these photos, you find exactly the opposite pattern. They're great at matching Australian celebrities and poor at matching UK celebrities.
Speaker 7
So at this point, we know that there's nothing in the faces themselves that make them easy or hard to match. It's just in the perceptions of the viewers.
So far, so good.
Speaker 7 We know that people are better at matching familiar faces. But what we then ask is: how well do you think other people will do on these faces when we give them the same task?
Speaker 7
And what you find is that the UK viewers think other people will find the UK faces easier. The Australian viewers think other people will find the Australian photos easier.
That can't both be true.
Speaker 7 It must be that they are falsely generalizing their own knowledge to other people.
Speaker 1 You make a very interesting point in the paper, and I was struck by it, which is that in some ways this might be part of a general phenomenon in cognition where we do not fully understand how difficult a task is for someone else to do.
Speaker 1 And especially when we're good at something, it's very, very difficult for us to anticipate how much harder it it could be for somebody else to do the very same task.
Speaker 7 That's right.
Speaker 7 It comes up in a number of areas of psychology. Even something simple like general knowledge.
Speaker 7 If you happen to have read some books about Napoleon and be knowledgeable about Napoleon, you falsely generalise that and assume that other people know more about Napoleon than they actually do.
Speaker 7 Of course, we all have our own different areas of specialist knowledge, and people turn out to be rather poor at understanding that and being able to generalize it.
Speaker 1 I'm wondering how good you are at facial recognition.
Speaker 2 I'm poor.
Speaker 7 On the tests I'm just a little below average.
Speaker 1 And has doing these tests and studying this, has it sort of changed the way you yourself trust yourself or your ability to recognize faces?
Speaker 7
Well I do now know how poor I am. I certainly would try not to rely on my own ability to do it.
But
Speaker 7 I think that nobody really really knew until the last few years just how bad we all are with unfamiliar faces. And it's just becoming clear now.
Speaker 1 After the break, we talk with someone who, like me, is very bad at recognizing faces. She shares the strategies she's developed to cope in public settings.
Speaker 1 You're listening to Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedanta.
Speaker 1 This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam.
Speaker 1 Our chronic inability to recognize faces, coupled with our chronic overconfidence in our ability to recognize faces, has big consequences.
Speaker 1 One place that's especially true is in the criminal justice system, where eyewitness identifications are often central to police investigations.
Speaker 1 But this issue also shows up in lots of other settings with lower stakes, recognizing colleagues at an office party or a fellow parent at a school meeting. Julie Dorschlach from Washington, D.C.
Speaker 1 has had this problem for a long time.
Speaker 8 I've had a lot of uncomfortable situations forgetting people and have been accused of being a snob or racist or, I mean, everything.
Speaker 1 If Allison Young, the cop we heard from earlier, was a super recognizer, you might call Julie faceblind. Her whole life, she's been terrible with faces.
Speaker 8 When I was in college,
Speaker 8 you're on a campus, you meet a lot of people all the time. And there were people I met for a few minutes at a party or something, a meeting, I don't know.
Speaker 8
And I'd be on campus, small campus, walking, and I'd walk past them. Didn't think anything of it, just smile and keep going.
And they were offended. I've heard over time people were offended.
Speaker 8 I got this little reputation of being this snobby person because I didn't greet everybody that I met, or how are you doing? Or so, and I normally would if I knew them or I thought I knew them.
Speaker 1 Julie's struggles followed her as she left college and entered the working world.
Speaker 8 I worked for an architecture firm in Philadelphia and we had to go to a meeting and I swore after going into the meeting and then coming back, going back into the meeting room, I talked to this guy as if I knew him.
Speaker 8
He happened to be African-American and I was talking to him. He's like, I'm not that man.
I said, oh, I'm sorry.
Speaker 8
I could have sworn. He's like, oh, okay.
So it became that.
Speaker 8 And it's not people of just color or different ethnicity.
Speaker 1 What do you do about it?
Speaker 8 I apologize profusely, and usually the people just walk away from me. So I just stop.
Speaker 8 I just feel embarrassed. I'm just used to being embarrassed.
Speaker 1 Research suggests, by the way, that people are worse at recognizing faces of people from unfamiliar groups.
Speaker 1 Many Americans are worse at recognizing the face of someone from a different race than a face of someone from their own race.
Speaker 1 Now, what makes Julie's dilemma especially acute is her husband, Marty.
Speaker 9 When I look at somebody, I never forget their face. If I spend about 30 seconds looking at somebody, I will remember their face for years and years and years.
Speaker 1 Marty Doschlag, Julie's husband, is a super recognizer. For years, Julie's been keenly aware of her husband's superpower.
Speaker 1 One time they were in Las Vegas sitting down for dinner at a restaurant, Marty glanced up at the waiter.
Speaker 8 He's like, oh, you waited on me in Columbus, Ohio, and X year, the guy just froze. And then he's like, oh, yeah, and I don't know how you put it together.
Speaker 8
You named the restaurant, the time, the place, and it was probably 15 years before. And he said, yeah, you're right.
And so he does it a lot with servers.
Speaker 8
And I think people in the restaurant industry travel. And he remembers them because they're servers.
You see their face.
Speaker 1 Marty's had lots of encounters like this. Like at the Dallas airport, he spotted a man he sat behind at a University of Michigan football game three years earlier.
Speaker 1 Now, you might think that with this gift, Marty could at least be Julie's crutch, but it doesn't always work out like that.
Speaker 9 If we're in a place, I'll always sometimes and I'll whisper in the back of her ear, that's Jim, you know, who works at so-and-so.
Speaker 8
Well, sometimes he doesn't catch me in time. I think we were at one of your friends' apartments.
A guy came in, and I went up and hugged him and said, Oh, it's so good to see you again.
Speaker 8 And Marty's friend leaned over and said, Why is Julie hugging the caterer?
Speaker 8 So,
Speaker 2 yeah, I remember that too.
Speaker 8 And I, and I thought that was funny.
Speaker 9 But I saw it coming too. I saw Julie approaching the guy, and I said to my friend, I said, Watch, she's going to think that's your roommate.
Speaker 9
Because they look sort of, they looked, I mean, they had the same color hair, I think, or something, and they were the same size. And I said to him, Here it comes, watch.
And sure enough, she did it.
Speaker 5 It was.
Speaker 8 But I touched him, I hugged him. So that goes into another, you have to be careful.
Speaker 1
Julie's cringeworthy ordeals hit close to home. Recently, I was watching a play.
The lead actor looked familiar.
Speaker 1 I stared at his face for the better part of 90 minutes, but it took me until after the play was over to realize this was a colleague of mine from NPR.
Speaker 1 I'd be absolutely terrible as a TSA agent. And it got me wondering, are there any solutions here? Julie's picked a simple one.
Speaker 8 I don't approach people with as much joie de viv. I don't touch them until I'm sure they want to be touched or that I know them.
Speaker 8 And also, I sort of create this verbal cue for them to tell me why I know them. So if I shake their hand, I'll say, oh, right.
Speaker 8
Do I know you from somewhere? And they're like, if they say, I don't think so, I said, okay, you just looked a little familiar. I'd rather err on that side.
than not knowing them.
Speaker 8
And if they finish the sentence, I said, yes, that's right. Good to see you again.
But I don't use again until I know that they've filled in the blank.
Speaker 1 There are going to be outliers among us, people with extraordinary skill at recognizing faces. Some of them end up as security officers or gregarious socialites or politicians.
Speaker 1 The rest of us are going to keep smiling awkwardly at office parties at people we're supposed to know.
Speaker 1 It's what happens when you stumble around in the 21st century with a mind that was designed in the Stone Age.
Speaker 1 After the break, Revisionist History brings us another take on facial recognition and how it colors so many of our perceptions about ourselves and each other. You don't want to miss it.
Speaker 2 Stay with us.
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Speaker 1
This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam.
For the rest of today's show, we're bringing you a story from our friends at the Revisionist History podcast.
Speaker 1 I'll pass things now to Revisionist History host, Malcolm Gladwell.
Speaker 2
Hello, hello. Malcolm Gladwell here.
Today, I'm in the studio with my producer, Lucy Sullivan. Lucy? Hi, Malcolm.
I understand you have a story for me about a particular misunderstanding.
Speaker 10 That is true. We're here because I want to tell you about something I'm calling the Missy Incident.
Speaker 2 Oh, goodness.
Speaker 10 It totally changed the way that I think about something foundational, and it also reminded me of you.
Speaker 2
Of me. Of you.
Oh, my God.
Speaker 10 Where are you?
Speaker 10 So it all happened at this coffee shop that I go to all the time.
Speaker 11 Can you tell me what the name of the coffee shop is?
Speaker 10 Malcolm, I can tell you the name of the coffee shop off mic, but my fellow cafe goers did not want me to name it on this podcast because it's that good.
Speaker 2 Oh, it's that good?
Speaker 10
Yeah, it's so good, and it's the kind of place that's always packed. So you have to be comfortable sitting with a stranger if you want to get a seat.
And that's where this all starts.
Speaker 10 So the person at the center of this, her name is Missy Kurzweil.
Speaker 10 She was fresh off of maternity leave with her second kid when the incident happened.
Speaker 4 I think one of the things that happens when you have a baby and are on maternity leave is like you lose a bit of your identity and yourself.
Speaker 4 You're spending all your time with a newborn who can't talk back to you. And so I was sort of just navigating that transition and wanting human interaction.
Speaker 10 So Missy is looking for a place to work outside of her home office and she finds this coffee shop.
Speaker 10 On her third morning, kind of feeling out this place, is this where she wants to set up camp for her HQ?
Speaker 10 She sits down at this table and in walks this guy and he's like, hey, you mind if I sit here? She says, sure. This is JJ Good.
Speaker 2 So JJ and Missy are sitting down together. What happens?
Speaker 10
Missy's on the phone with her kids' pediatrician. And JJ is sitting there eavesdropping.
And, you know, the doctor asks her, what's the patient's name? And Missy says, oh, his name's Remy.
Speaker 4 And JJ freaked out because he was like, you have a Remy? Because I have a Remy. And then, of course, like that, then we were off to the races.
Speaker 10
Turns out they both have cats named Sonny. They both are freelancers.
He's a cookbook writer. She's also a writer.
Speaker 4 So for me, it was like on many levels just really kind of a special bond instantly.
Speaker 10 And I don't know if this is normal for you, but like, I don't usually, I'm not usually chatting it up with people at the coffee shop.
Speaker 2 But these two, and there's nothing romantic going on here.
Speaker 10
Nothing romantic. Yeah.
Strictly friends who are just like, wow, we have so much in common.
Speaker 4 I think no matter where you're at in your life, meeting someone like JJ feels unusual because he's just so open and so seemingly genuinely interested in what you have to say and what are all these details about your life.
Speaker 10
So Missy is excited. She goes home and she tells her husband, oh my gosh, I've met this great friend and I found this great coffee shop to work.
Like things couldn't be better.
Speaker 10 And so for the next few days, Missy and JJ sit together, work together, crucially always at the same spot in the front. But one day she comes in and their usual table is taken.
Speaker 10 So she just heads to a different one in the back.
Speaker 4 And maybe an hour after I sat down, I see JJ kind of walk to the back and he's looking around seemingly for a table and we make direct eye contact.
Speaker 4 And I start to say, hey, JJ,
Speaker 4 but he looks at me and sort of kind of registers it and turns around and walks the other way.
Speaker 2 He goes, sir.
Speaker 10
He goes, sir. Like completely, like she was like, we made eye contact.
I was like, maybe he didn't see me, but no. He saw me.
Our eyes locked. I went to wave.
He turned around.
Speaker 10 So now Missy's like, what is going on here?
Speaker 10 Like, she had just met his wife a couple days before, and she's like, maybe the wife wasn't comfortable with like, or maybe she's thinking something's going on.
Speaker 10
Maybe I said something weird to him. Like, she's really like spinning her wheels.
She's reeling.
Speaker 2 She's reeling.
Speaker 4 And I went back the next day, sat in the back, and the same thing happened where he walks by, sort of sees me, seemingly like we make eye contact.
Speaker 4 And this time I think I probably was a little bit more reserved because of what had happened the day before. And he turns around and walks the other way again.
Speaker 4 And now I'm like, okay, I think I might have said something that offended him.
Speaker 2 My name is Malcolm Globwell. You're listening to Revisionist History, my podcast about things overlooked and misunderstood.
Speaker 2 And since we're talking about misunderstandings, whatever you think is going on in this story right now, I promise you, you've got it wrong.
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Speaker 10 So, Messy is obviously super bummed about this.
Speaker 4 You know, I mean, listen, I've been with my husband for a long time, so I haven't been like on the dating scene, but it definitely had an equivalent: like, you put yourself out there and you like are, you know, think that you're connecting with someone, but they're not experiencing that same thing.
Speaker 10 She considered trying to find a new place to work, but like I said, the coffee shop is just too good. And so after a few days, she decides, you know what, I'm just going to go back.
Speaker 10
I'm going to ignore the weirdness. And this time, their usual spot in the front is open.
So she sits down and then right on queue, JJ walks in.
Speaker 4
And he sees me and his face lights up and he's like, Missy, you haven't been here in like a week or two. I've missed you.
Where have you been?
Speaker 4 And then he sits down and he's chit-chatting and he's catching up and he's asking questions just like nothing, no time passed.
Speaker 2 Like nothing happened.
Speaker 10 Like absolutely nothing happened. Yeah.
Speaker 8 And I was so confused.
Speaker 4 I did not know what to make of that, but I was kind of just relieved that the freeze-out was over.
Speaker 2 And so I just went with it and was like, oh, you know, good to see you again.
Speaker 4 And I just sort of picked up where we left off and I didn't say anything.
Speaker 10 And it wasn't too long after that that she discovered what was really going on and why it seemed like this new friend was just totally ignoring her.
Speaker 4 I'm sitting at a table with JJ and a woman walks in,
Speaker 4 super friendly, comes over to JJ and says, hey, JJ, and I think goes to give him a hug and asks him questions about how his kids are.
Speaker 4 Their conversation lasts just a few minutes and then she walks away to get a coffee and he looks at me and he goes, I don't know who that is.
Speaker 2 And I was like, what?
Speaker 10 You seemed like you were friends with her.
Speaker 4 And he was like, I have this faceblindness thing. It gives me a lot of anxiety because I'm probably supposed to know her.
Speaker 4 And then I think I paused and I said something like, is that why you broke up with me six months ago?
Speaker 10 And this is the part that made me think of you, Malcolm, faceblindness. Because I've heard that you also might be a little faceblind yourself.
Speaker 2 Yes, yes, that's true. This happens to me.
Speaker 2 All the time. I won't remember if I need to expose to a face, a person on multiple occasions before their face becomes meaningful.
Speaker 2 Or even there, I don't know whether their face is becoming meaningful or that I'm developing so many other ways of recognizing them that I feel on safer ground.
Speaker 10 Like you're not just going to remember someone that you've met once or twice in passing.
Speaker 2 No, there's no chance that I will. I had it's actually funny because I was sitting in my favorite coffee shop and I see
Speaker 2
there's a guy who runs the wine shop across the street. His name is Michael.
I'd known Michael for years. And I see Michael, or I think it's Michael.
Speaker 2
And I see a slender man in his 50s, about 5'9, with glasses and a baseball cap across the street from the wine shop. And I think, oh, that's got to be Michael.
And I go, Michael.
Speaker 2
And the guy looks at me like really weird and comes over. And it was like my nightmare.
It's like, oh, my God. No, it's not.
It's just another dude who's in town who looks a lot like Michael.
Speaker 2 But that was my system failed.
Speaker 2 It's very rare for me to risk it like that. But I risked it because I thought, if Michael thinks, I had the reverse JJ, if Michael thinks I'm ignoring him,
Speaker 2 then that's really bad because I go to the wine shop all the time and I like Michael.
Speaker 10 See, it's interesting because this, like, this never happens to me. Like, I'm often on the other side of it being like, all right, I'm just going to pretend like I don't know.
Speaker 2 You always remember.
Speaker 10 I always remember. And I always remember people who are completely insignificant to me.
Speaker 10 Like not in any sort of like value judgment ways, just like, oh, I met you once at my friend's friend's party four years ago, and now you are standing next to me in line at Target.
Speaker 2 That's so completely foreign. Yeah.
Speaker 10 And this is why, actually, Malcolm, to be honest, like when I had first heard, because I think I heard from someone in passing before we started working together, like, oh, Malcolm, he's faceblind.
Speaker 10 He has trouble recognizing people. And I was like.
Speaker 10 Okay, like, yeah, he's faceblind. Like, because I was thinking, like,
Speaker 10 I've never forgotten. I just don't forget people's faces.
Speaker 10 So, I was like, if I were you and I was meeting a million people all the time and people recognized me from book covers, that would be kind of a disorienting experience.
Speaker 10 And it would be kind of nice to have an excuse, like, oh, I don't remember you because I'm like faceblind or whatever. But I just couldn't believe that that was true until I heard the story.
Speaker 2 Yeah, no, no, I do. And it makes me feel bad because I, we're, you know, I mean, I feel for JJ because
Speaker 2 it's you're in this constant state of worry about
Speaker 2 that you're going going to be perceived as cold or aloof and you're not. Yeah.
Speaker 10 And so like this perception problem is exactly what fascinates me about face blindness, which I've now spent way too many hours learning about after hearing this story of Missy and JJ.
Speaker 10
Because I've always thought that being able to recognize someone was... about, you know, having a good or a bad memory, whatever that means.
Yeah. Or just frankly caring enough to remember them.
Speaker 10 Like you worry that you might be perceived as cold or aloof if you you don't say hi to Michael, or Missy thought her new friend was ignoring her. I seem to remember way more faces than I want to.
Speaker 10 I really wanted to understand what's actually going on in our brains when all this happens.
Speaker 2 After the break, Lucy Sullivan takes us behind the face and into the brain.
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Speaker 10 JJ Goode, Missy's friend from the coffee shop, doesn't know exactly when he realized he had a problem with faces. He just kept having these strange experiences.
Speaker 10 Like this one time when he ran into a woman on the train and he knew he was supposed to know who she was, but he had no idea.
Speaker 12 And we had this conversation where I was like, how
Speaker 12 is everything?
Speaker 12 Things are good with me. Like, I didn't mention mention any, there's no specifics because I wanted to make, like, I didn't want it.
Speaker 12 If you walked in and someone had no idea who you were, you would feel
Speaker 2 bad about yourself.
Speaker 10 JJ said he also realized something was off when he'd watch movies and TV shows. He'd sometimes completely miss a big plot point.
Speaker 12 When my wife and I were watching a show,
Speaker 12
I'll be like, who's that guy? And she's like, it's the main character. He just has a hat on.
Like, it's literally Robert De Niro from the other scene. And I was like, ooh, this is kind of strange.
Speaker 10 All of this has led to many awkward situations, and it's made JJ very aware of other people's feelings. What happened with Missy still haunts him.
Speaker 12 I am afraid that I might have an interaction with someone, and I might not recognize them, and I might not give them the attention that makes them feel good.
Speaker 10 It's worth noting that JJ himself is easy to spot. He was born with one arm.
Speaker 12
Walking around with one arm, you are highly recognizable. It's like, how many one-armed people do you meet? Probably not a lot.
So everybody comes in to the coffee shop.
Speaker 12 And if you see me, you probably will recognize me as that guy from the coffee shop the next day. But I don't recognize a lot of the people who come in.
Speaker 10 A while back, JJ told some friends about these weird moments he'd always had, not recognizing people. And they asked if he'd ever heard of face blindness.
Speaker 10 They said Oliver Sachs, the science writer, had it too. And that's when it clicked for JJ.
Speaker 11 So it is a little bit of the stealth disorder. I mean, people only kind of learn they have it often when they are subjected to a whole bunch of new people they have to meet.
Speaker 10
This is Dr. Joe DeGudas.
He's a cognitive neuroscientist and he studies facial recognition. DeGudis teaches at Harvard Medical School and runs a lab out of the Boston VA hospital.
Speaker 11 We've studied how people become aware that they have this and often it's a little rocky.
Speaker 11 It's a little bit like, you know, in school they're like, I just just don't pay attention or I don't care as much about people or maybe I'm a little bit on the spectrum.
Speaker 11 They have all these attributions they can give.
Speaker 10 The thing about people who are quote unquote faceblind is that they're not actually blind. They're not seeing blurs where people's faces are.
Speaker 10 They can see eyes, nose, mouth, ears, and they can read emotions and tell whether or not someone's attractive the same way we all do.
Speaker 10 The best estimates I could find suggests that around 3% of the population has some form of faceblindness. Sometimes it's the result of a traumatic brain injury, but some people are just born with it.
Speaker 10 Scientists think it could be genetic or that the network in the brain that recognizes faces just doesn't develop normally.
Speaker 10 But for most of us, a face is the trigger that calls up all the information we know about a person.
Speaker 11 If you see somebody's face, it quickly triggers the retrieval of all this other information about them, like, you know, who they are, how you know them, all these other details about the person.
Speaker 11 So it has this kind of privileged role in terms of getting all this other information out.
Speaker 10
The clinical term for faceblindness is prozopagnosia. An agnosia is an inability to recognize something.
Prozopagnosia uses the Greek word for face, prozopo,
Speaker 10 which also happens to be the Greek word for person.
Speaker 10
So much of who we are is wrapped up in this one part of our bodies. I want you to stop for a second.
Think about your mom mom or your best friend or your kid.
Speaker 10
You're not picturing their elbows, are you? I mean, maybe you are. Crazier things have happened.
My point is, for most of us, it's almost impossible to decouple who someone is from their face.
Speaker 11 It's something that is also very special about humans.
Speaker 10
This special thing that DeGudis is talking about here has to do with our brains. We have a specific network.
that's just for recognizing faces, and it functions unlike any other kind of cognition.
Speaker 11 So when I recognize a chair, I'm like, oh, okay, it has something to sit on, has some legs, and boom, it's a chair.
Speaker 11 You're recognizing things at this functional level, which is like, okay, how do I interact with this thing? You know, usually you can do it part by part.
Speaker 11 One of the things that we do with faces more than any other like visual object is you process it as a gestalt as a whole because we have to kind of recognize them and not just like, okay, that's a face, that's a face.
Speaker 11 We have to be like, okay, that's my friend.
Speaker 10 Oh, that's not, that's so moi that's the person at work who i need to avoid and so it's like i think that the individuation demands of faces maybe are why we kind of had this specialized system to process faces frogs use sound birds use smell and we humans love this one cluster of features sitting on top of our necks We are social animals, and researchers think that's part of why humans developed this special recognition network in our brains, because it served us.
Speaker 10
Faces have evolved to look really different from person to person, more so than any other body part. Scientists at UC Berkeley think that this had an evolutionary purpose.
It helped us socialize.
Speaker 10
Not only was it beneficial to be recognizable, but also then to be able to recognize others. Humans had to get really good at differentiating friend from foe.
And we did get really good at it.
Speaker 10 Well, most of us, anyways.
Speaker 10 DeGudis told me that the ability to recognize faces is a spectrum.
Speaker 11 These are all these kind of internal things that we don't talk about, and we just assume that everybody's kind of like us, right?
Speaker 10 And after the break, we're going to the other end of that spectrum to see what it's like for the people who never forget a face. The super recognizers.
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Speaker 10 One morning, back in 1984, a little kid named Frank Vaughan was about to have a very exciting day of school.
Speaker 2 I was nine years old and my fourth grade class was invited on a school field trip to the governor's office in Little Rock.
Speaker 10 That's Governor Bill Clinton's office, to be exact.
Speaker 2 They arranged us all in a semicircle semicircle in cross-legged style, and we waited for the man to show up. And typical of politicians, he was around 15 minutes late.
Speaker 2 He walks out, he sits down, and he immediately turns and he snaps his fingers and points at one of his female staffers and said, you, go get my Pepsi.
Speaker 2 And she took off on a dead run for his inner office to go grab that Pepsi.
Speaker 10
Frank was a scrawny nine-year-old boy. with feathery blonde hair that grew out in all directions.
Nerdy kid, always cracking jokes for attention.
Speaker 10 Frank said that he and his classmates were so excited about meeting the governor.
Speaker 2 There was this almost throne-like velvet chair sitting in the middle of the room, and he sits down in it and he crosses his legs and he, you know, just sort of gets himself arranged.
Speaker 10
Frank remembers feeling in awe of this man sitting on a throne, barking out Pepsi orders. He said the governor greeted them all and started asking them questions.
And then Clinton zeroed in on Frank.
Speaker 2 I don't know if I just have one of those faces or what, but for some reason, he settled on me and he pointed at me and he said, you, what do you want to be when you grow up?
Speaker 2 And after witnessing everything I had just seen, the only answer I could come up with was, I want to be you.
Speaker 10 Frank said that his teacher looked horrified at this response. He thought he was about to get in trouble like he usually did for cracking jokes.
Speaker 2
And then the governor started laughing. And of course, when he starts laughing, his staff joins in.
And we all joined in. And it sort of released all the tension in the room.
Speaker 10 Clinton moved on from Frank, asked some other kids questions. He lectured them about about the importance of eating their vegetables and doing their homework, and then he sent the class on their way.
Speaker 10 That was that.
Speaker 10 Okay, so now we're going to fast forward 13 years later, March of 1997.
Speaker 10 Clinton is just a few months into his second term as president, and back in his home state of Arkansas, a series of tornadoes have just destroyed the town of Arkadelphia.
Speaker 10 25 people were killed, dozens were injured, 1,200 buildings were leveled. It was a huge disaster.
Speaker 10 Governor Mike Huckabee declares a state of emergency, FEMA is called in, and a few days after the storm settles and the rebuilding has started, President Clinton visits Arkadelphia.
Speaker 3 It's obvious that you all have done a lot of work here in just a couple of days.
Speaker 3 Everybody has really pitched me.
Speaker 10 Frank Vaughan is no longer a little boy. He's a six-foot-one college student attending Wachita Baptist University in Arkadelphia.
Speaker 10 That feathery blonde hair is now closely cropped in the style typical of his fellow members of the Reserve Officer Training Corps.
Speaker 10 Frank and his friends heard that the president was in town, so they went to try and see him. Frank said that there were hundreds of people lining the streets of Arkadelphia doing the same.
Speaker 2 And honestly, when I saw the entourage coming up the street with the Secret Service agents and the governor was with him, I thought, well, he's going to walk down the middle of the street because there's no way they're going to let him have, you know, physical contact with people.
Speaker 2 He's the president. And I was wrong.
Speaker 10 President Clinton, ever the people person, starts making his way into the crowd, shaking hands and taking pictures with kids.
Speaker 2 There was a limited about a three-block area that we were allowed to stand on from street to street to street.
Speaker 2 But he literally went up one block shaking hands, turned, went back down the next block shaking hands, turned and went back up the third block.
Speaker 2 I mean, he spent a good four hours just walking these blocks and shaking hands with people.
Speaker 10 And then Clinton gets to where Frank and his friends are standing.
Speaker 2 He stopped, stuck his hand out, shook my hand, and he looked at me, and he leaned in and he said, do you still want to be me?
Speaker 10 Frank said that he almost passed out.
Speaker 10 There he was in the middle of a disaster zone in his college town, shaking hands with the President of the United States, who has just recalled a small anecdote from meeting him 13 years earlier.
Speaker 10 when he was nine years old and several feet shorter.
Speaker 2
The first thought in my mind was, I need to go to church and pray because this is like demonic. It was just so shocking.
And listen, when I tell this story, I know it's hard to believe.
Speaker 2 I understand that it seems almost impossible. But if, as we say back home, if I'm lying, I'm dying.
Speaker 10 I asked Frank how he thought Clinton could possibly have remembered him.
Speaker 2
Some people are just like that, I guess. It's little wonder that he was...
you know, born in Hope, Arkansas to a very poor family and ended up being the most powerful man in the world.
Speaker 2 You don't get there without talent.
Speaker 10
People always talk about this mythical charisma Clinton possessed. He dazzled voters on the campaign trail.
And believe it or not, there are tons of stories just like Frank's.
Speaker 10 The comedian John Mulaney has a whole bit in his 2015 comedy special about Clinton's ability to remember people.
Speaker 5 I want to tell you one more story before I get out of here. About the night I met a guy named Bill Clinton.
Speaker 10 Mulaney tells the story of this disagreement between his parents, who went to college with Clinton at Georgetown University, over whether or not Clinton would remember his mom, Ellen.
Speaker 10 Apparently, he would sometimes walk her home from the library in college.
Speaker 10 Mulaney talks about his mom dragging him to a campaign event in the 90s to see if the presidential hopeful still remembered their walks.
Speaker 2 Here's what happens.
Speaker 13 She was swinging me like a snowplow. I was just mowing down fat Chicago Democrats.
Speaker 13
I pushed past all the reporters. I pushed past all the photographers.
We push past all the Secret Service. We land at Bill Clinton's feet.
Speaker 13 Bill Clinton turns, looks at my mom, and says, hey, Ellen, because he never forgets a bitch, ever.
Speaker 10 Remember, facial recognition abilities are on a spectrum. Researchers are pretty sure it's a normal distribution, with prozopagnosics on the low end.
Speaker 10
Most of you listening are probably somewhere in the normal range. But there are also these people on the very high end, the super recognizers.
Those who never forget a face, ever.
Speaker 10 Something that the super recognizers are uniquely good at is being able to identify people even after a lot of time has passed, or they've made changes to their appearance.
Speaker 10 This is something that Bill Clinton is very good at.
Speaker 10 Now we can't know for sure, and Bill Clinton has never said anything about this super recognizing ability, but I'd venture to say that he is almost certainly a super recognizer. Dr.
Speaker 10 Joe DeGudis, the neuroscientist, told me that one of the ways they test facial recognition abilities is by showing people pictures of celebrities when they were kids. The before they were famous test.
Speaker 11
Oh, it's a picture of like, you know, Barack Obama when he was like two years old. And super recognizers can like see it.
There's this kind of cool extrapolation thing that you can be like, I can see.
Speaker 11 you know, how that could be a younger version of Barack Obama.
Speaker 10 While I was reporting the story, I came across a bunch of tests online, like the Before They Were Famous one. You can take them to gauge how good or bad you are at recognizing faces.
Speaker 10
And I kept getting really good scores on them. Suddenly, everything started to make sense.
Remember earlier when I was telling Malcolm that I never forget people?
Speaker 10 That I sometimes feel creepy after recognizing someone in line at Target? I started to suspect that maybe I was one of these super recognizers.
Speaker 10 While JJ misses the plot of some movies and TV shows, I get distracted by extras.
Speaker 10 Like, for instance, when I notice that a passing character in a 2001 episode of Sex in the City is the guy who, spoiler alert, gets murdered in the first season of the show White Lotus 20 years later.
Speaker 10 Faceblind people can't find their friends on the street, while I sometimes walk past someone that I recognize as my high school friend's cousin who I've only seen pictures of.
Speaker 10 In one of our early calls, I told DeGudis about my theory. And being the good scientist he is, he wasn't sold right away.
Speaker 11 I mean, maybe you just like convinced yourself that you're super and you're not really super.
Speaker 10 He needed cold, hard data, not random buzzfeed quizzes.
Speaker 10 So I hopped on Zoom with his research assistant, Caleb Usal, and took a three-hour battery of tests designed to definitively say whether or not I was a super recognizer.
Speaker 10
All right, so the next one is called Face Name. You can go ahead and click on that link.
The test test started off super easy. I was breezing through.
Speaker 10
So they're showing me that same face from like different angles. And I would say that is extremely easy.
But things got weirder as the hours went on, and I started to get a little stressed.
Speaker 10 Now I'm getting nervous. I'm like, I need to want to get these right.
Speaker 10 Which is one of the six target faces one.
Speaker 10 I had to do things like remember jobs and names of people whose faces would flash across the screen really quickly. And at one point I was matching spiky blobs with other spiky blobs.
Speaker 10 That one was so hard.
Speaker 11 Yeah, the Georgia's is really creepy.
Speaker 10 That made me feel like I took drugs or something.
Speaker 2 I was like, oh, what's happening here?
Speaker 10 Kayla and I wrapped up, and she said they'd get back to me in a few days with my results. I was eager to hear them and unsure of what they would be.
Speaker 10 By the end, I didn't think I did very well, and I was kind of embarrassed about the whole charade. What if I was just average?
Speaker 10 A few days later, the verdict was in.
Speaker 10 Degutas and I hopped on a Zoom call to go over my results.
Speaker 11 I mean, you're kind of the complete package for Super Recognizer.
Speaker 2 So I'm
Speaker 2 kind of, I feel like, I mean, maybe when you started taking the test, I was a little skeptical, but I think you're right on. I think this is
Speaker 10
okay. I have to admit, I was over the moon at being called the complete package.
I said, please, go on.
Speaker 11 Actually, looking at your results, you were like perfect on two of the
Speaker 11 on two of the diagnostic tests. Like you didn't get a single item wrong.
Speaker 11 You also did really well in this very impossible task where we had you, you know, try to learn 60 faces in a very short period of time and you had to recognize them like out of 120 faces.
Speaker 10 Oh, that one was so hard.
Speaker 2 Yeah.
Speaker 11
No, you did. I mean, that's the thing.
We wanted to kind of push you to see what your limits are. And you do have limits, but you were really, you were really quite good.
Speaker 10
Getting my suspicions confirmed was so gratifying. It was cool to know that I have this superpower.
Less than 2% of people can say the same. I had to share all this with Malcolm.
Speaker 2 You're like the LeBron James of facial recognition.
Speaker 10 He did say I was a complete package, so I will also take LeBron James if you want to call me that. I'm not going to argue.
Speaker 2
My experience of you is dramatically different than your experience of me. I am forced to find alternate means of recognition.
What those of us who have impairment in this area do is
Speaker 2 we get obsessed with all the other possible cues that we can use to identify somebody. And because they're not as reliable as the face, we're always getting into trouble.
Speaker 10
Yeah, exactly. This is what J.J.
Goode, the guy from the coffee shop, told me that he tries to do too.
Speaker 14 That's Caitlin with a beautiful chin.
Speaker 2 Oh, I'm sorry, Caitlin. I just want to see you.
Speaker 14 This is
Speaker 14
Daniel. He is baldhead.
That's how I remember him.
Speaker 2 Small, bald.
Speaker 10 So a couple months ago, I spent the morning with him at the coffee shop, and he was going around introducing me to all of his friends and telling me how he tries to identify them here.
Speaker 6 Oh, there she is.
Speaker 14 This took me a while to recognize her, but she's got like very distinct glasses, which is useful. But she's been talking about changing her glasses.
Speaker 14 So I'm worried about that.
Speaker 10 So he told me that he tries really hard to find these cues, but you know, it's still hard for him and he never wants a repeat of the Missy incident.
Speaker 10 So his solution is to just treat every person that walks in as if they are his friend.
Speaker 14 Everybody who comes in the door, I stare them down because I'm like, I hope I have to see if I recognize you or know you or not. So I'm staring at them and they look at me and they're like,
Speaker 14 hi. And I'm like, hi.
Speaker 14 Just in case I know them. And they're like, well, that guy's friendly.
Speaker 10 And that morning I was there, JJ was surrounded by people. Like you think he was the mayor or the owner of this place.
Speaker 10 I was like, did you tell all these people to show up because you knew I was coming? And he was like, nope. So he really has made all these friends, even in spite of the faceblindness thing.
Speaker 10 And I just think that's such a lovely way to live.
Speaker 2 That is really beautiful.
Speaker 10 JJ and Missy are great friends now, despite the incident. You can find them working and chatting at the coffee shop most days.
Speaker 10 They get dinner every once in a while, and their spouses and kids have become friends too.
Speaker 10 But their story could have ended very differently.
Speaker 12 Like our friendship almost ended over this, and it's, this is my nightmare. So, this person felt so bad because I was not giving her the right attention
Speaker 12
that she, like, had a whole, like, crisis. Like, what did I do? I feel so bad.
And that's why I'm so weird and extra-friendly.
Speaker 10 We've all had these experiences where we don't recognize someone right away, or someone doesn't recognize us. It can be embarrassing and awkward.
Speaker 10 But the split-second assumptions that we make about why, that they're aloof or that we said something that offended them, or that maybe we just aren't memorable, might be wrong.
Speaker 10 Faces matter, but it all comes back to what's in our heads.
Speaker 2 Lucy,
Speaker 2 that is, you are Lucy, right? Yes, so that's me.
Speaker 10 I changed my shirt, but it's still me.
Speaker 2 This
Speaker 2 has been a lot of fun.
Speaker 10 This has been great. Thanks, Malcolm.
Speaker 1 That was Revisionist History producer Lucy Sullivan and the show's host, Malcolm Gladwell. I hope you enjoyed this episode of Revisionist History.
Speaker 1 If you like what you heard, you can find more from Malcolm Gladwell and the Revisionist History team wherever you get your podcasts.
Speaker 1 Hidden Brain is produced by Hidden Brain Media. Our audio production team includes Annie Murphy-Paul, Kristen Wong, Laura Quirrell, Ryan Katz, Audum Barnes, Andrew Chadwick, and Nick Woodbury.
Speaker 1
Tara Boyle is our executive producer. I'm Hidden Brain's executive editor.
For more Hidden Brain, be sure to check out our weekly newsletter where we bring you the latest research on human behavior.
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Each issue also features a brain teaser and a moment of joy. You can read it and subscribe at news.hiddenbrain.org.
That's n ews.hiddenbrain.org.
Speaker 1 I'm Shankar Vedantam.
Speaker 2 See you soon.
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