Experiencing the Impossible by Gustav Kuhn

Experiencing the Impossible by Gustav Kuhn

Author:Gustav Kuhn
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: Magic; Conjuring; Psychology; Cognition; Neuroscience; Deception; Consciousness; Illusion; Illusions; Misdirection; Magical thinking; Mind control; Hypnosis; Science of magic; Paranormal beliefs; Attention; Memory; Memory Illusion; Free Will; Priming: Subliminal Perception; Sleight of hand
Publisher: The MIT Press
Published: 2019-03-11T16:00:00+00:00


Notes

1. H. von Helmholtz, Treatise on Physiological Optics, ed. J. P. C. Southall, vol. 3, The Perception of Vision (1924; repr., Mineola, NY: Dover, 2005).

2. G. Mather, The Psychology of Visual Art: Eye, Brain and Art (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014), 6.

3. G. Lamb, Victorian Magic (London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1976), 41–50.

4. R. L. Gregory, Seeing through Illusions (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009), 127.

5. J. Spencer, J. O’Brien, P. Heard, and R. Gregory, “Do Infants See the Hollow Face Illusion?” (poster presentation, 34th European Conference on Visual Perception, Toulouse, France, September 1, 2011).

6. D. Dima, J. P. Roiser, D. E. Dietrich, C. Bonnemann, H. Lanfermann, H. M. Emrich, and W. Dillo, “Understanding Why Patients with Schizophrenia Do Not Perceive the Hollow-Mask Illusion Using Dynamic Causal Modeling,” NeuroImage 46, no. 4 (July 15, 2009): 1180–86.

7. E. Pellicano and D. Burr, “When the World Becomes ‘Too Real’: A Bayesian Explanation of Autistic Perception,” Trends in Cognitive Sciences 16, no. 10 (October 2012): 504–10.

8. See G. Kuhn, A. Kourkoulou, and S. R. Leekam, “How Magic Changes Our Expectations about Autism,” Psychological Science 21, no. 10 (October 2010): 1487–93.

9. Gregory, Seeing through Illusions.

10. V. Ekroll, B. Sayim, and J. Wagemans, “The Other Side of Magic: The Psychology of Perceiving Hidden Things,” Perspectives on Psychological Science 12, no. 1 (January 2017): 91–106.

11. A. S. Barnhart, “The Exploitation of Gestalt Principles by Magicians,” Perception 39, no. 9 (September 2010): 1286–89.

12. Ekroll, Sayim, and Wagemans, “Other Side of Magic.”

13. V. Ekroll, B. Sayim, and J. Wagemans, “Against Better Knowledge: The Magical Force of Amodal Volume Completion,” i-Perception 4, no. 8 (December 2013): 511–15.

14. V. Ekroll, B. Sayim, R. Van der Hallen, and J. Wagemans, “Illusory Visual Completion of an Object’s Invisible Backside Can Make Your Finger Feel Shorter,” Current Biology 26, no. 8 (April 25, 2016): 1029–33.

15. Ekroll, Sayim, and Wagemans, “Other Side of Magic.”

16. Ekroll, Sayim, and Wagemans, “Other Side of Magic.”

17. The illusion was first described by Max Dessoir in 1893. N. Triplett, “The Psychology of Conjuring Deceptions,” American Journal of Psychology 11, no. 4 (July 1900): 439–510.

18. Triplett, “Psychology of Conjuring Deceptions,” 492.

19. G. Kuhn and M. F. Land, “There’s More to Magic than Meets the Eye,” Current Biology 16, no. 22 (November 21, 2006): R950–51.

20. G. Kuhn and R. A. Rensink, “The Vanishing Ball Illusion: A New Perspective on the Perception of Dynamic Events,” Cognition 148 (March 2016): 64–70.

21. G. Underwood, “Visual Attention and the Transition from Novice to Advanced Driver,” Ergonomics 50, no. 8 (2007): 1235–49.

22. A. D. Milner and M. A. Goodale, The Visual Brain in Action (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995).

23. G. Króliczak, P. Heard, M. A. Goodale, and R. L. Gregory, “Dissociation of Perception and Action Unmasked by the Hollow-Face Illusion,” Brain Research 1080 (March 29, 2006): 9–16.

24. M. Changizi, The Vision Revolution (Dallas: BenBella Books, 2009), 109–162.

25. B. Khurana and R. Nijhawan, “Extrapolation or Attention Shift,” Nature 378, no. 6557 (December 7, 1995): 566.

26. J. J. Freyd and R. A. Finke, “Representational Momentum,” Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning Memory and Cognition 10, no. 1 (January 1984): 126–32.

27. Kuhn and Rensink, “Vanishing Ball Illusion.”

28. J. Cui, J. Otero-Millan, S. L. Macknik, M. King, and S. Martinez-Conde,



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