Hidden Brain - Brain Bonus: Magic Brain
Episode Date: October 2, 2015In time for your Friday commute, we introduce you to a new segment called Magic Brain. Shankar explores the social science behind magic, and discovers that free choice is sometimes just an illusion. ...
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Hey Shankar Vidantam here.
Thanks so much for listening to my podcast.
I want to bring you a special hidden brain bonus episode for your weekend.
One idea that intrigues me is the intersection of magic and psychology.
It just so happens that longtime NPR producer Barry Gautamer is also a talented magician.
So we teamed up to bring you a new segment we're going to call Magic Brain.
I'm joined in the studio now by Melissa Melnicki.
She's NPR's Talent Relations Manager, but the real reason she's here with me right now
is that she is an unsuspecting volunteer for an experiment that we're about to run on
her.
Melissa, hello.
Hi, Shankar.
How are you?
I'm doing great.
I'm not sure you're doing so great.
And you might not be doing so great after I introduce you to our
Other visitor who is in the studio with us Barry Gordamer is a producer at Morning Edition
But the reason he's here is that for 15 years Barry used to be a professional magician
My stage name was the sort of amazing Barry
Sort of amazing because I wasn't quite as good as the other magicians out there
Sort of amazing because I wasn't quite as good as the other magicians out there. Barry, I think you're going to show Melissa something.
I have a deck of cards in my hand, you can see they're all different.
I'm going to spread them out in my hand's face down, please take a card.
Any card.
All right, and Melissa, careful now.
Whatever you think you're going to pick first, don't pick that card and pick a completely different card.
Or not.
Any card.
Okay.
Here we go.
Picking a card and not being manipulated.
Alright.
So Melissa has extracted a card.
You take a look at that card.
I'm going to cut the deck in the middle.
Please drop your card in there.
Very good.
It's better.
It's better why you take a card.
Alright. I'm going to do the same thing. I'm going to think of a card and I'm going to change the card that there. Very good. Charger, why don't you take a card? All right, I'm gonna do the same thing.
I'm gonna think of a card,
and I'm gonna change the card that I pick right now
and pick a different card.
All righty.
All right, I have looked at my card.
Put it in the deck there, and...
Okay, on the count of three,
I would like for you to say the name of your card out loud.
One, two, three. Queen of Hearts.
What? Are you kidding me?
That, that, that, that blew my mind. How in the world did you do that Barry?
As magicians like to say, very well. Clearly you did this very well. This is
astonishing Barry. How did you know what I was gonna pick? This was an exercise
in the manipulation of choice. I forced you to take the same card.
You did not.
I made a free choice to pick the card that I picked, Barry.
Thank you for saying that.
That's what I wanted you to think.
But I, and the key to it.
The key to it is you felt you had the freedom to do it.
So this is fascinating because, of course,
there's a whole body of social science research
barrier that looks at this idea that you can actually nudge people into doing certain
things while making them feel like they have freedom of choice.
And you know marketers have obviously been using these techniques on us for many years
nudging us to buy this brand of soap rather than that brand of soap.
But it gets really interesting when you're talking about manipulating really important
life decisions.
So researchers have found, for example, that you can influence whether people join a retirement
savings plan when they start a new job.
If you make the default option that you're automatically enrolled, unless you opt out,
more people choose to participate in these savings plans compared to when the default option
is you're not automatically signed up and you have to choose to sign up.
People tend to feel like they have a free choice.
When in fact, they actually tend to choose the default option no matter what that option
is.
The key point in that is people can't be aware initially that you are trying to influence
them because that influences the choice.
Now in this context, Shankar, you knew I was going to pull a trick,
so you tried to influence what I was doing and influence what Melissa was doing. And funny enough,
as a professional magician, I always found it easier to get someone to pick the card I wanted them to
pick when they were trying to mess me up. So in other words, when they were trying to figure out what
you were doing to manipulate them, you found it easier to manipulate them? Yes, I did and one of the reasons I think is because people are always laughing when this goes on and it's difficult to do critical thinking while you're laughing
I think I'm gonna blame Melissa here because I think she did most of the laugh
Yes, I did laugh right a bit. All right next time we will do the same trick without Melissa in the studio
And I'm sure Barry Gordonimore you will not fool me.
I'll take that challenge.
Barry Gordimore I want to thank you for making some time for us today.
Thank you.
I enjoy getting in your head.
Melissa Melnicki, thank you so much for coming in.
Absolutely thanks for having me.
This is Hidden Brain.
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