Choosing in freedom or forced to choose? Introspective blindness to psychological forcing in stage-magic
Metadata
Show full item recordAuthor/s:
Shalom, Diego E.
Serro, Maximiliano G. de Sousa
Giaconia, Maximiliano
Martínez, Luis M.
Rieznik, Andrés
Sigman, Mariano
Date:
2013-03-13Abstract
We investigated an individual ability to identify whether choices were made freely or forced by external parameters. We
capitalized on magical setups where the notion of psychological forcing constitutes a well trodden path. In live stage magic,
a magician guessed cards from spectators while inquiring how freely they thought they had made the choice. Our data
showed a marked blindness in the introspection of free choice. Spectators assigned comparable ratings when choosing the
card that the magician deliberately forced them compared to any other card, even in classical forcing, where the magician
literally handles a card to the participant This observation was paralleled by a laboratory experiment where we observed
modest changes in subjective reports by factors with drastic effect in choice. Pupil dilatation, which is known to tag slow
cognitive events related to memory and attention, constitutes an efficient fingerprint to index subjective and objective
aspects of choice.
URI:
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0058254https://repositorio.utdt.edu/handle/20.500.13098/11077