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Tag: Night Owls

  • Night owls exhibit better cognition, research suggests

    Night owls exhibit better cognition, research suggests

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    Night owls exhibit better cognition, new research suggests. The study found that people who prefer to stay and wake up late tended to perform better on cognitive tests than early birds. Getting a decent amount of sleep was also associated with better cognition. 

    The research, conducted by scientists from Imperial College London in the UK, aimed to explore the relationship between different aspects of sleep and mental performance, including a person’s preferred sleep time, or chronotype. Our chronotype runs along a spectrum, with early birds preferring to sleep and wake up early and night owls preferring a late night and late morning rise.

    Examining sleep and cognition

    The research team analyzed data from the UK Biobank, a longstanding research project that has followed UK residents’ health for many years. As part of the project, researchers asked volunteers to undergo various tests and fill out questionnaires about their daily habits, including sleep. The researchers split the analysis into two parts: they examined data from volunteers who had completed all four cognitive tests included in the project and those who completed two specific tests that assessed their memory and reaction time.

    All told, the team examined data from over 26,000 participants ages 53 to 86, finding several links between sleep and better cognitive functioning. Those who reported sleeping the typical amount recommended, around seven to nine hours a night, tended to do better on cognitive tests than those who didn’t, for instance. But the researchers also found that self-reported night owls exhibit better cognition compared to early birds, as did people somewhere in the middle. 

    “Our study found that adults who are naturally more active in the evening (what we called ‘eveningness’) tended to perform better on cognitive tests than those who are ‘morning people,’” said lead author Raha West, a researcher at ICL’s Department of Surgery and Cancer, in a statement from the university. “Rather than just being personal preferences, these chronotypes could impact our cognitive function.”

    Correlation doesn’t imply causation

    The team’s findings, published this week in the journal BMJ Public Health, can show only a correlation between being a night owl and better mental sharpness, not definitively prove it. And even if this was the case, there are other potential disadvantages to being an evening person. Night owls who work or go to school early are more likely to experience social jetlag, for instance, meaning they can’t often get the amount or kind of sleep they prefer—a discrepancy that can cause subtle but noticeable long-term harm to a person’s metabolism and overall health. Night owls in general may also be at higher risk for health issues like diabetes.

    The researchers say their work demonstrates that the relationship between our brain and sleep is nuanced and complicated. But at the very least, it seems that trying to ensure that we get as much sleep as we need, ideally when we prefer it, is key to keeping our minds sharp. 

     “While understanding and working with your natural sleep tendencies is essential, it’s equally important to remember to get just enough sleep, not too long or too short,” said West. “This is crucial for keeping your brain healthy and functioning at its best.”

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    Ed Cara

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  • Late Night With the Devil Is a Retro, Occult-y Good Time

    Late Night With the Devil Is a Retro, Occult-y Good Time

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    Just when you think found-footage horror has exhausted its last avenue for something creative and new, a movie like Late Night With the Devil comes along. Styled as a Halloween episode of a 1970s talk show that goes way off the rails, it perfectly captures the aesthetic of the era—as well as its burgeoning fascination with all things occult.

    (But first, an important note: if you learned about this movie thanks to its use of AI art, which has been causing a stir online, you can more about that in this Variety piece, in which the filmmakers responded with a statement that reads in part: “In conjunction with our amazing graphics and production design team, all of whom worked tirelessly to give this film the ‘70s aesthetic we had always imagined, we experimented with AI for three still images which we edited further and ultimately appear as very brief interstitials in the film.” They are indeed so briefly used I didn’t even notice that the art was AI-generated while I was watching the film—but if that’s something you don’t want to support, it’s good to have that information ahead of time.)

    Long a “that guy” supporting actor (The Boogeyman, The Last Voyage of the Demeter, Oppenheimer, The Suicide Squad), David Dastmalchian steps into the lead (rocking sideburns and a polyester beige suite) as Jack Delroy, host of late-night syndicated talk show Night Owls. He’s found some success, but “Mr. Midnight” hasn’t been able to emerge from Johnny Carson’s shadow—and after several years on the air, he’s desperate to boost his sagging ratings. That’s the context we get from Late Night With the Devil’s documentary-style opening, which then rolls right into the “recently discovered master tape” of the infamous episode, including behind-the-scenes footage captured during commercial breaks.

    Naturally, it being Halloween, Delroy and his team—producer Leo (Josh Quong Tart) and sidekick/announcer Gus (Rhys Auteri)—cook up a special they hope will delight and maybe frighten viewers. Jack’s guests include a famous medium (Fayssal Bazzi) who purports to be able to speak to the dead; a parapsychologist (Laura Gordon) and the young cult survivor (Ingrid Torrelli) who’s the subject of her new book, the ominously titled Conversations With the Devil; and a stage magician turned skeptic (Ian Bliss) who’s there to question everything, and is quite clearly inspired by real-life debunker James Randi. Plus: music, jokes, a costume contest, mass hypnosis, and… demons unleashed?

    Image: Courtesy of IFC Films and Shudder

    Sibling writing-directing duo Colin Cairnes and Cameron Cairnes did their research—you can tell many hours of 1970s talk shows were consumed as part of their research process, and as a result Late Night With the Devil feels eerily authentic. The script also does a good job sprinkling clues to the movie’s last-act meltdown throughout. You know from the start that “a live TV event that shocked a nation” (hat-tip to infamous British mockumentary Ghostwatch) is about to happen, but the build-up is nearly as fun as the chaos when it arrives.

    Late Night With the Devil hits theaters March 22; it arrives on Shudder April 19.


    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    Cheryl Eddy

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