← Back to Paradoxes

Verbal Overshadowing

When Words Erase What Your Eyes Saw

1
2
3
4
5
DESCRIBING A FACE MAKES YOU WORSE AT RECOGNIZING IT!

Here's a deeply counterintuitive finding: if you witness a crime and then describe the perpetrator's face, you become significantly worse at picking them out of a lineup.

Schooler & Engstler-Schooler (1990) found that participants who described a face correctly identified it only 38% of the time—compared to 64% for those who did an unrelated task. That's a 27% reduction in accuracy from simply putting the face into words!

This effect challenges common police practices. Witnesses are routinely asked to describe suspects in detail before viewing lineups—yet this "helpful" verbalization may actually overwrite their visual memory with an inferior verbal representation.

Ready to experience it? You'll see a face briefly, then either describe it OR do a filler task. Finally, you'll try to identify the face from a lineup.