Cole Geoff G, Millett Abbie C
Centre for Brain Science, University of Essex, Wivenhoe Park, Colchester CO4 3SQ, UK.
School of Social Sciences and Humanities, University of Suffolk, Ipswich IP4 1QJ, UK.
Vision (Basel). 2023 Aug 23;7(3):56. doi: 10.3390/vision7030056.
A number of authors have argued that the art of conjuring can assist the development of theories and knowledge in visual cognition and psychology more broadly. A central assumption of the so-called science of magic is that magicians possess particular insight into human cognition. In a series of experiments, we tested the Insight hypothesis by assessing three factors that magicians argue are important for a popular illusion. Participants viewed videos of a magician performing the French Drop sleight whilst gaze, motion, and muscular tension were manipulated across experiments. Contrary to what the community of conjurers state, results showed that none of these influenced the perceived success of the effect. We also found that a visual priming technique, one suggested of many and used by an eminent magician, does not influence participant responses. Overall, these findings fail to support the Insight hypothesis. We suggest that scientists of magic have erroneously imbued magicians with insights they do not possess.
一些作者认为,魔术艺术可以更广泛地促进视觉认知和心理学理论及知识的发展。所谓魔术科学的一个核心假设是,魔术师对人类认知有着独特的洞察力。在一系列实验中,我们通过评估魔术师认为对一种流行幻觉很重要的三个因素来检验洞察力假设。参与者观看了一位魔术师表演法式落巾手法的视频,同时在实验中对注视、动作和肌肉紧张度进行了操控。与魔术师群体所说的相反,结果表明这些因素都没有影响到该效果的感知成功率。我们还发现,一种视觉启动技术,这是众多技术中的一种且被一位著名魔术师所使用,并没有影响参与者的反应。总体而言,这些发现未能支持洞察力假设。我们认为,魔术科学家错误地赋予了魔术师他们并不具备的洞察力。