What Can Magicians Teach Us about the Brain?

Neuroscience can learn a lot by tapping the intuitive knowledge of magicians as new sources for inspiration and study.














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A magician tosses a ball into the air once, twice, three times. Suddenly, the ball vanishes in mid-flight. What happened?

Don’t worry, the laws of physics haven’t been broken. Magicians do not have supernatural powers; rather, they are masters of exploiting nuances of human perception, attention, and awareness. In light of this, a recent Nature Reviews Neuroscience paper, coauthored by a combination of neuroscientists (Stephen L. Macknik, Susana Martinez-Conde, both at the Barrows Neurological Institute) and magicians (Mac King, James Randi, Apollo Robbins, Teller, John Thompson), describes various ways magicians manipulate our perceptions, and proposes that these methods should inform and aid the neuroscientific study of attention and awareness.

Magicians Secrets Revealed


The underlying concept of using quirks in human perception to learn about how the mind works is an old one. Visual, auditory and multisensory illusions, in which people’s perceptions contradict the physical properties of the stimuli, have long been used by psychologists to study the mechanisms of sensory processing. Magicians use such sensory illusions in their tricks, but they also heavily use cognitive illusions, manipulating people’s attention, trains of logic and even memory. Although magicians probably haven’t studied these phenomena with the scientific method—they don’t do controlled experiments—their techniques have been tested over time, perfected by practice and performed under conditions of high scrutiny by skeptical audiences looking to spot the trick.

An example of a visual illusion used by magicians is spoon bending, in which a rigid horizontal spoon appears flexible when shaken up and down at a certain rate. This effect occurs because of how different parts of objects (in this case, the spoon) are represented in the brain. Certain neurons are responsive to the ends/corners of the object, whereas others respond to the bars/edges; the end-responsive neurons respond differently to motion than do the bar-responsive neurons, such that the ends and the center of the spoon seem misaligned when in motion.

Attention can greatly affect what we see—this fact has been demonstrated in psychological studies of inattentional blindness. To misdirect people’s attention and create this effect, magicians have an arsenal of methods ranging from grand gestures (such as releasing a dove in the theater to distract attention), to more subtle techniques (for instance, using social miscues). An example of the latter can be found in the Vanishing Ball Illusion described at the start of this column. At the last toss, the magician does not actually release the ball from his or her hand. Crucially, however, the magician’s gaze follows the trajectory the ball would have made had it been tossed. The magician’s eye and head movement serves as a subtle social cue that (falsely) suggests a trajectory the audience then also expects. A recent study examining what factors produced this effect suggests that the miscuing of the attentional spotlight is the primary factor, and not the motion of the eyes. In fact, the eyes aren’t fooled by this trick—they don’t follow the illusory trajectory! Interestingly, comedy is also an important tool used by magicians to manipulate attention in time. In addition to adding to the entertainment value of the show, bouts of laughter can diffuse attention at critical time points.

Magicians can also manipulate the audience’s memory, thus making it difficult to mentally reconstruct what happened. In the cognitive science literature, it is now established that providing misinformation about past events can reduce memory accuracy and create false memories, a fact magicians have intuitively known for centuries. Consider this trick: a person is shown pairs of photographs and asked to choose the more attractive face. After he makes a choice, the magician slyly switches several of the chosen faces for the rejected faces. Then, the subject is asked to explain his preferences. According to a recent experiment, even when people are shown faces they rejected, they still tend to invent explanations for why that face was more attractive. In other words, they make up a false narrative to explain away the sleight of hand they couldn’t detect.

Magic’s Role in Neuroscience

Cognitive neuroscience can explain many magic techniques; this article proposes, however, that neuroscientists should use magicians’ knowledge to inform their research. For example, perhaps cognitive scientists could have learned about important false memory effects earlier if they had considered magicians’ intuitions on the topic.


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  1. 1. digitalgoldfish 10:49 AM 3/24/09

    It's well known that the easiest people to trick are scientists because they think they are the the best educated and would spot a trick. This is why many scientists were taken in by people like Uri Geller (who now claims he was only ever a 'magician'). When investigating people who claim to defy the laws of physics, it's very important to include magicians as well as physicists. It takes one to know one, i guess.

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  2. 2. James Randi in reply to digitalgoldfish 05:14 PM 3/24/09

    More importantly, scientists deal with a real world in which matter, radiation, and physical/chemical entities do not purposely deceive. The magician subverts that comfortable world. The presence of a conscious element with diverting methods, is not the ideal lab atmosphere... On the other hand, a magician - more correctly, conjuror - has a difficult time fooling a child simply because the child is not sophisticated enough to accept apparent honesty; an adult is.

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  3. 3. AbleCluster 11:59 AM 3/25/09

    Magic is so cool. So many possibilities!

    RT
    www.privacy-tools.us.tc

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  4. 4. tktsr@hotmail.com 02:31 PM 3/25/09

    one of my favorite tricks when i was a young magician was a simple trick called "vernon's five card mental force" because it seemed like real magic and all it did was make a subject pick the card you wanted merely by verbally appealing to the subject-it wasn't - !00% but enough to risk and the magician was also truly amazed himself at the power he attained




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  5. 5. eco-steve 01:06 PM 4/6/09

    One very simple trick in company is to grab a slice of carrot from a goldfish bowl and wiggle it as you swallow it. Everyone witnessing the event will be convinced you swallowed a live goldfish and will express revulsion towards you. Simple, very effective and guaranteed to fool everybody! Magicians are always fascinating and remind us how fragile our perception is... We are all so easily fooled...

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  6. 6. armageddonsaviour 02:54 PM 4/25/09

    Good Article

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