(Press-News.org) To succeed at university, Italian students need to pass interview-style oral exams. Now scientists have found that the time of the exam could be a critical factor influencing their success… or failure. Even when other factors were excluded, the chances of passing were highest around lunchtime, and lowest at the beginning or end of the day.
“We show that academic assessment outcomes vary systematically across the day, with a clear peak in passing rates around midday,” said Prof Carmelo Mario Vicario, director of the Social-Cognitive Neuroscience Lab at the University of Messina and lead author of the article in Frontiers in Psychology. “Students were more likely to pass in late morning compared to early morning or late afternoon.”
“We believe this pattern could extend to job interviews or any evaluative process scheduled throughout the day,” added Vicario. “We would be very interested in investigating whether hiring decisions, too, fluctuate in fairness or outcome depending on time of day.”
Timing is everything
The researchers were inspired by work which showed that judges were most likely to rule in favor of a defendant after meal breaks or at the beginning of a session. However, this could have been influenced by different types of case being presented at different times. So the researchers looked at oral exams, which are more subjective than legal decisions. If the time of day influences people’s judgement, large-scale data on exam outcomes should show evidence of it.
“Oral exams in Italian universities are scheduled at set times, typically lasting 10 to 30 minutes per student,” explained Vicario. “There's no standardized format: professors ask questions based on the course content, and grades are assigned on the spot. These exams can be highly stressful due to their unpredictable nature and the strong weight they carry in academic progression.”
A database from the University of Messina allowed researchers to access the results of exams conducted between October 2018 and February 2020. The researchers collected the time, date, and outcome of 104,552 assessments delivered by 680 examiners for 1,243 courses. They also used the number of credits granted towards a degree per exam to measure the difficulty of individual exams. This allowed them to exclude the difficulty of the exam as a factor and carry out statistical analysis evaluating the likelihood of passing based on the time when the exam began.
Beating the curve
The researchers found that only 57% of the exams were passed. The passing rate followed a bell curve with a peak at noon: there was no significant difference in your chance of passing if you sat your exam at 11:00 or 13:00, but your chances of passing were lower if you took the exam at 08:00 or 09:00, or at 15:00 or 16:00. The chance of passing was equivalent in the early morning and in the late afternoon.
"These findings have wide-ranging implications,” commented Prof Alessio Avenanti of the University of Bologna, co-author of the study. “They highlight how biological rhythms — often overlooked in decision-making contexts — can subtly but significantly shape the outcome of high-stakes evaluations."
Although the study can’t identify the mechanisms behind this pattern, the peak in passes at midday is consistent with evidence that cognitive performance improves over the course of the morning before declining during the afternoon. Students’ falling energy levels could lead to diminishing focus, compromising their performance. Professors might also be experiencing decision fatigue, leading them to mark more harshly.
Meanwhile, poorer results earlier in the day could be down to competing chronotypes. People in their early 20s are usually night owls, while people in their 40s or older tend to be morning larks. The students might be least cognitively sharp at the time when the professors are most alert.
“To counteract time-of-day effects, students might benefit from strategies like ensuring quality sleep, avoiding scheduling important exams during personal ‘low’ periods, and taking mental breaks before performance tasks,” suggested Vicario. “For institutions, delaying morning sessions or clustering key assessments in the late morning may improve outcomes.”
But more research is needed to fully understand the factors which contribute to the time of day’s influence on students’ performance, and develop ways of improving the fairness of assessments.
“While we controlled for exam difficulty, we can’t entirely exclude other unmeasured factors,” said Prof Massimo Mucciardi of the University of Messina, senior author. “We couldn’t access detailed student- or examiner-level data such as sleep habits, stress, or chronotype. This is why we encourage follow-up studies using physiological or behavioral measures to uncover the underlying mechanisms.”
END
Students more likely to pass oral exams at noon — and that might apply to job interviews, too
Physiological rhythms could explain why Italian university students were more likely to fail exams early or late in the day
2025-07-24
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
New research details how our brains are drawn to and spot faces everywhere
2025-07-24
New research details how our brains are drawn to and spot faces everywhere
If you have ever spotted faces or human-like expressions in everyday objects, you may have experienced the phenomenon of face pareidolia. Now, a new study by the University of Surrey has looked into how this phenomenon grabs our attention, which could be used by advertisers in promoting future products.
The study, published in i-Perception, investigated the differences between our attention being directed by averted gazes – when a subject looks away from another subject’s eyes or face – and when it’s directed by pareidolia – imagined ...
National study finds healthcare provider stigma toward substance use disorder varies sharply by condition and provider
2025-07-24
A new national study from Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, with colleagues at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, University of Chicago, National Opinion Research Center, and Emory University finds that stigma toward patients with substance use disorders (SUD) remains widespread among U.S. healthcare providers—and varies significantly across types of substances. The findings are published in the journal Addiction.
The study is the first national analysis to compare provider stigma across opioid (OUD), stimulant, and alcohol use disorders (AUD) with other chronic ...
Epigenetic regulation of JASMONATE ZIM-DOMAIN genes contributes to heat tolerance in the heat-tolerant rice cultivar Nagina 22
2025-07-24
The study led by Dr. Xiangsong Chen (Wuhan University) and Dr. Haiya Cai (Hubei Academy of Agricultural Sciences) analyzed the transcriptomes of two rice cultivars, Nagina22 and 93-11, under high-temperature stress. It was found that the expression of JAZ genes specifically increased significantly in N22 at the early stage of heat stress, accompanied by a significant decrease in the expression of downstream response genes of the Jasmonic acid (JA) signaling pathway. Additionally, exogenous application of JA significantly reduced the heat tolerance of N22, indicating that the suppression ...
Free AI tools can help doctors read medical scans—safely and affordably
2025-07-24
A new study from the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus shows that free, open-source artificial intelligence (AI) tools can help doctors report medical scans just as well as more expensive commercial systems without putting patient privacy at risk.
The study was published today in the journal npj Digital Medicine.
The research highlights a promising and cost-effective alternative to widely known tools like ChatGPT which are often expensive and may require sending sensitive data to outside servers.
“This is a big win for healthcare providers and ...
Fungus-fortified bread-wheat crops offer improved nutrition
2025-07-24
University of Adelaide researchers have discovered that applying a beneficial fungus to soil leads to some varieties of wheat accumulating more bioavailable zinc and iron in the grain.
The researchers inoculated eight widely grown Australian bread wheat varieties with a commercially available arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus product and found the plants had more grain and accumulated greater amounts of nutrients – in particular, the essential human micronutrient zinc.
“Our research shows inoculating agricultural soils with mycorrhizal fungi could be a promising strategy for producing wheat grain with higher ...
Worms use classic and recycling routes to secrete yolk proteins
2025-07-24
Yolk proteins (vitellogenins, VITs) are crucial lipid-carrying molecules that supply nutrients from the mother to embryos in oviparous animals. In humans, their functional analog apolipoprotein B-100 (apoB-100) is a core component of low-density and very low-density lipoproteins (LDL and VLDL, respectively), playing a pivotal role in systemic lipid transport. Understanding how these lipoproteins are secreted may help unravel the mechanisms underlying conditions like atherosclerosis and fatty liver disease.
In a recent article published in Life Metabolism, researchers report that VIT secretion in Caenorhabditis elegans is ...
Grassland changes put endangered parrot at greater risk
2025-07-24
The endangered golden-shouldered parrot, a technicolour species native to Far North Queensland’s Cape York Peninsula, is abandoning areas of grassland it usually nests in because woody plants are encroaching upon its preferred vegetation.
Dr Gabriel Crowley, from the University of Adelaide, assessed the fate of 555 golden-shouldered parrot eggs from 108 nests monitored on Artemis Station by its owner, Susan Shephard, and Charles Darwin University researcher, Professor Stephen Garnett.
They discovered that the spread of woody plants increased the probability of predation, and reduced nest success and survival of nesting adults.
“The ...
Peanut Ubiquitin4 promoter enables stable transgene expression and efficient CRISPR editing
2025-07-24
A research team led by Dr. Xiaoqin Liu at the Peking University Institute of Advanced Agricultural Sciences has discovered and characterized a native peanut Ubiquitin4 promoter (AhUBQ4) with strong and consistent transcriptional activity. Recognizing the limitations of foreign promoters like CaMV 35S in peanut transformation—such as gene silencing and expression variability—the team sought a native solution to boost genetic engineering efficiency in this vital crop.
Using transcriptome data ...
Gut cells found to 'whisper' like brain neurons: Discovery redefines how the body heals itself
2025-07-24
In a key advance for regenerative medicine and gut health, scientists from Duke-NUS Medical School and Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (NTU Singapore) have uncovered a precise and unexpected communication system in the gut. Support cells known as telocytes use fine extensions—like neurons in the brain—to deliver signals directly to intestinal stem cells. Their study, published in the journal Developmental Cell, challenges long-standing assumptions about how the gut maintains and repairs itself, possibly leading to better treatments for conditions like IBD ...
Cells sense energy stress via ROS
2025-07-24
AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) plays a central role in maintaining energy balance in cells, especially under energy stress. While upstream activation by the kinase LKB1 is well recognized, the precise mechanism by which LKB1 is mobilized under energy-deficient conditions has remained elusive.
A recent study published in Life Metabolism reports that ROS, molecules often associated with oxidative stress, serve as critical signaling intermediates in this process. Under conditions such as glucose deprivation or metformin treatment, intracellular ROS levels rise, promoting the S-glutathionylation of PKCζ at cysteine 48. This post-translational modification facilitates the ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Identifying landslide threats using hydrological predictors
First graders who use more educational media spend more time reading
Exploring the meaning in life through phenomenology and philosophy
Linking alterations in precursor cells of brain formation with the origin of neuropsychiatric diseases
New insight in how cells regulate gene activity
Gut microbiome may predict “invisible” chronic fatigue syndrome and long COVID
New AI tool accelerates mRNA-based treatments for viruses, cancers, genetic disorders
Automated speed enforcement significantly reduces speeding in Toronto school zones
Persistently, intensely grieving relations are nearly twice as likely to die within 10 years after losing a loved one
Media–public disconnect on wild meat narratives in central Africa during COVID-19
"High notes from one side, deep tones from the other" – Janus-like wave transmission
Long-term exposure to outdoor air pollution linked to increased risk of dementia
Accelerating science with AI
New research uncovers gene impacts of PFAS exposure in firefighters
Unlocking the brain’s filing cabinet
A brain-inspired approach for resilient AI processing
‘Powerful new approach’: New drug combination strategy shows promise against hard-to-treat cancers
Understanding the epigenetic mechanisms behind premature aging of the brain
New study reveals critical link between neighborhood violence, youth fighting, and perceived firearm availability
AI platform designs molecular missiles to attack cancer cells
Could metasurfaces be the next quantum information processors?
Precision drug delivery with magnetic steering and light-triggered release
A century of data reveals declining forest diversity
Duke University men’s basketball and football teams learn how to save a life with CPR
Obesity shapes COVID-19’s long-term damage
New research: Satellite imagery detects illegal fishing activity, shows strict protections work
One billion-year-old rules of protein stability revealed
Satellites show that strictly protected marine areas exclude industrial fishing
Scientists call for urgent policy reform to accelerate cross-border coral restoration efforts
Two studies reveal global patterns of industrial fishing across marine protected areas
[Press-News.org] Students more likely to pass oral exams at noon — and that might apply to job interviews, tooPhysiological rhythms could explain why Italian university students were more likely to fail exams early or late in the day